Adding chemical ingredients
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Christine Carrillo
Enter Arthur Lander’s classroom in the biological sciences building
at UC Irvine on a Tuesday afternoon and you may find yourself
slightly bewildered.
Granted, you’re sure to find the traditional science-related
knickknacks one would expect to see on a laboratory table in the
front of the room, but instead of finding the professor standing
behind it dressed in a white lab coat, you’ll find Lander -- a
professor and chair of developmental and cell biology -- wearing a
white apron and chef’s hat.
The various cooking essentials, which could be anything from
cutlery to soy sauce, may throw you for another loop.
Even when he first offered the Biology and Chemistry of Food and
Cooking class three years ago, his students couldn’t make sense of
it.
Now, sitting through a three-hour lecture on foods of the world
and extreme fermentation doesn’t seem so bizarre.
“I think it’s the best class,” said Ann Pham, a fourth-year
chemistry student. “It’s neat to see how chemistry exists in
something we do every day.”
By focusing on molecular and cellular analysis of cooking, such as
protein structure, browning reactions, colloids, emulsions,
carbohydrate metabolism and development of flavor and texture through
biochemical transformations, the class introduces fundamental
principles of chemistry, biology and physics.
“For me, the main goal is that students should have an
understanding of what science really is and shed the notion that it’s
a distant, difficult, esoteric subject that really has no impact on
their lives,” said Lander, a self-proclaimed gourmet chef. “One can
think like a scientist in one’s dealings with the everyday world.”
In this case, their dealings in the kitchen.
“I love cooking,” Pham said. “I’ve learned there’s so much more to
food. I’ve learned an insight into foods.”
As Lander lectures on the science of cooking, an assistant helps
him with the chopping, water boils in a beaker heated by a Bunsen
burner, and students pass around food samples while they take notes.
Everything serves a purpose.
“Some of the reasons I like to cook is in a way because it’s like
a scientific exploration,” Lander said. “I think people appreciate
knowing what’s really going on rather than having [their food be] a
mystery.”
While that explains the classroom activities, what about the hat?
“That’s all part of getting people in the mood.”
* IN THE CLASSROOM is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot
education writer Christine Carrillo visits a campus in the
Newport-Mesa area and writes about her experience.
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