Boston Apothecary

July 4, 2010

advanced culinary communication basics

This is just an amateur rant targeted mainly at enthusiasts of popular, contemporary, culinary art.  All ideas are mainly the product of meditations i’ve gone through to make better, more powerful cocktails as well as become a better steward of wine.  Not every “foodie” will be amused by my targets of inquiry and in regards to aspects of art criticism, Peter Schjeldahl said it best, “a chemical analysis of water would irk someone mostly aware of being thirsty” so either turn back now or quench your thirst and lets keep going.

Interest in culinary art really seems to be growing these days.  It could easily be because the news of late is so depressing that people are opting to only read the dining and sports sections of the newspaper.  This explosion of interest has even led to a few of the chefs I know appearing on tv (looking like idiots).  My oppressively blue collar parents have even started drinking wine.  I never thought I’d see that day.

I feel though, that this growth of interest is all happening with barely any advances in our ability to communicate about our experiences.  We are taking all this culinary art in, and it is touching our souls like art does (awesome), and we want to talk about it (naturally), but we are only able to market these experiences to each other in conversation (“balanced” wines with 97 point RP scores), not describe them or differentiate them.  Our methods of converting sensory evaluation and emotional content to language needs more attention.

The first question we have to ask is what can culinary art communicate? what can I say with a cocktail and what specific aspects of it say anything?  A drunk bar regular once told me his glass of tequila whispered to him “the desert is large”.  We cannot expect the most useful things to be said, but I have been moved to my greatest joys by things I’ve drank.  What takes us to that joyful state (or any state, even repulsion) are tensions that exist in the work.  These tensions add up to emotional content and are therefore the provoker of your reaction.

My cocktails aim to have particular tensions between elements of structure (acidity, sweetness, alcohol, etc.) as well as tensions between symbolism (particularly the aromatic type), however vague.  The symbols do not have to be too precisely read because there is no plot to the story.  Olfactory symbols are intended to be more like reminders or reference points.  We string them together or bounce off of them creating tension that adds to the emotional content.  Emotional content via symbolism functions relative to the micro or macro context you frame it in, therefore each “reminder” doesn’t exactly point to the same place for each person and we will react in different ways (why we have preferences).

Conversing about our experiences is important.  For starters, when we have a conversation with ourselves we may be more likely to etch an experience into our mental library.  We rely on this library to build the schemas that we use to parse experiences.  New wine drinkers are often frustrated that they have little to say about a wine while experienced wine drinkers have tons to say and probably have more feelings, positive or negative about the experience.  The difference between the drinkers lies in the size of their library, which I bet, discussions of sensory evaluation and emotional content enlarges and maintains.

Our culinary history has a historical record that begs to be written and sensory evaluation should be a key component yet it often gets left out. Somehow our recipes have always been slim on details.  Julia Child (among others) changed recipe writing and culinary history when she detailed the techniques used to physically link ingredients so dishes could actually be recreated by laymen.  Child’s insights ended a long era of purely “shovelware” cook books, but things could be taken further by adding some sort of sensory evaluation to the recipes.  This is easier said than done.  A spaghetti “Carbonara” recipe cannot practically turn into a book in itself (bad marketing material) where every possible relationship is mapped, but if it had to be done, does anyone know how to do it?  We seem to have some sort of deficiency of technical analysis skills and a lack of creative linkage jargon to push the theoretical limits of recipe writing.

The current state of most our recipes is that they are highly dynamic, but what happens if we can write them in a way that makes them static?  The static recipe is a way to walk a day in another man’s shoes, which is usually my goal when I ask someone for their recipe.  A static recipe can convey the regional acid ethic of a classic dish which is something so many chefs get criticized for missing.  Culinary history would be firmer and culinary art objects would become more accessible and enduring.

Many cocktail recipes have made the static shift which is not difficult because of the simplified texture and temperatures.  In 19th century books like the “The Bon Vivant’s Companion”, early mother recipes like the “gin sling” or “whiskey cocktail” were encouraged to be dynamic and stretch up and down to an imbiber’s whim.  By the time the “Savoy Cocktail Book” came around, some recipes were on their way to becoming more staticly locked (many will challenge this assertion).  The result was that new recipes could be more expressionistic and packed with emotional content that we can still experience today just like other art mediums such as Edvard Munch’s expressionist painting “The Scream”.  the “Lucien Gaudin” from the Savoy (look it up!) is not the “Lucien Gaudin” if the proportions, which largely define its emotional content, change.  Of course a new can of worms gets opened up because these statically motivated authors did not have the foresight to see that brands would waver or go under.

The cocktail renaissance has often stumbled because of so many defunct ingredients.  Many ingredients have no sensory evaluation in their historical record so substitutions are impossible.  We will never know if products with a fantasy names like “Hercules” or “Caperitif” were anise or orange aromatized, but we do however have all of their marketing which makes the products seem enticing enough.  It is really a shame that they are gone forever (or their static recipes are just stuck in Internal Revenue Service laboratory records that the Freedom of Information Act can’t seem to penetrate.  Yes, the IRS did pioneer static recipe writing with their importation forms for aromatized wines).

Many imbibers strive to reenact the civil war and make historically accurate cocktails (I love the idea of taking in the same experience as the first Martinez, Manhattan, or Martini), but some suspect the ingredients have wandered aromatically and if they haven’t… how did they do it? Developing and maintaining aromatized products like the Chartreuses or the vermouths takes a team (generations of teams) who obviously have to communicate.  What do these teams say to each other and can we benefit from their communication techniques?  American liquor law might state that “vermouth is a wine which looks and tastes like vermouth” but generations of vermouth producers have hopefully come up with something better.

Culinary communication might be furthered if we could refine or popularize some definitions.  The word at the heart of it all that needs more attention in defining is flavor.  Flavor too often gets confused with it’s component parts, therefore the ambiguity of the language used can make it difficult to communicate.  Flavor is the synesthetic summary experience of tasting, touching, and smelling.  Things get confusing because we use the verb taste to take in flavors but taste as a noun is only a component of a flavor.  This communication setback probably happened because we did not realize flavor was a synesthetic experience.

Synesthesia in this context means that, for example, the aromatic component of a flavor will influence perception of the taste component and separation of the components while perceiving will be challenging if not possible.  This happens because certain aromas make things taste sweeter than they really are while other aromas make things taste less sweet.  The components of flavor can be identified, named, and relationships between them can be mapped.  This knowledge, like the formal aspects of painting, can be used to charge culinary art with extra potent emotional content (my obsession).

The painting analogy can teach us a lot about breaking down the flavor phenomenon.  Early in the 20th century, painters started to be intensely concerned with exploring spatial effect in the picture plane (sensation of three dimensions using the two-dimensional picture plane).  These “plane conscious” artists mapped all the illusions that led one to believe they were experiencing three dimensions on the two dimensional picture plane.  These artists even liberated us from mere illusions which often have negative connotations.  What was once illusory became a “plastic reality”.  What this means to flavor is that if you think a wine is sweet, but there is no measurable sugar in the wine, you aren’t really wrong.  Not being wrong isn’t the end of it.  You still have to work harder in communicating if you want the waiter to bring you a wine whose perception of sweetness via aroma you actually enjoy.

Plane consciousness is the future of culinary art.  The painter Hans Hoffman stated “a plane is a fragment of the architecture of space”.  A culinary art experience is easily analogous to taking in space because space isn’t so much real as just an abstract concept.  Each culinary art object is an entire world created out of relationships between these planes.  Isolating planes and defining their relationships is going to motivate artists to develop the science by behind manipulating them (we have already seen great growth in this recently).

The great frontier of culinary communication is in aroma.  Each of us has an “olfactory construct” that we use to divide and categorize our aromatic world.  Research shows that “olfactory symbolism” or the meanings we attach to aromas which guide the divisions of our constructs are culturally relative and therefore we are not exactly hard wired to believe anything smells good or bad.  Many constructs are possible and aromas can be divided into all sorts of categories, some more useful to culinary art than others.

There may even be a hardwired type of olfactory construct that is intensely useful to building and describing flavors in culinary (someone please study this i’m dieing to know if its hardwired).  We can divide aromas based on how they change the perception of sweetness in a flavor.  I call this construct the “round/angular olfactory construct”.  Round aromas are the fruits like orange, apple, apricot, etc, but also aromas like anise, and almond.  If only slightly, these aromas will all increase the perception of sweetness in a flavor.  Angular aromas create the opposite effect (do not confuse with sourness) and some bartenders call spirits like rye whiskey that are dominated by hard to name angular aromas “drying agents”.  Other angular aromas are spices like juniper, clove, and cinnamon.

Multiple round aromas in a flavor experience can be described with the analogy of overtones and intervals.  some round aromas together like apricot and orange are intensely hard to parse and create an overtone.  Distinct “intervals” happen between more disparate round aromatic linkages like coconut-pineapple or anything-anise.  The aromas are perceived in a succession that can add serious “depth” to a flavor experience.  The round aromatic interval is analogous to how depth is created in the picture plane by intervals of warm and cool colors (“warm & cool” is an arbitrary analogy that we’ve grown to accept!).

Angular aromas exist in what could also be called “intervals”, but they seem to have a slightly different nature where they do not produce overtones (or maybe they do? My theory is not firm).  An analogy to describe the groupings of angular aromas could be “terraced” with few intervals that seem to climb in larger steps (fernet) to “crescendo” where there are many intervals which seem to climb gradually and are hard to differentiate (vermouth, Chartreuse).

We seem to love the linkage of round and angular aromas.  They often lead to a very pleasurable sense of spatial effect (Arnold Palmer) and are great considerations when improvising drinks.  Strangely, both Chartreuses seem to be elaborate sets of only angular aromas absent of all roundness.  The skewed nature of it all may have had strange symbolism to the early monks such as celibacy or the denial of pleasure (though it could also be a cover up for their deviate behavior).  No matter what the chartreuses symbolize, it must have taken some sort of communication of sensory analysis to exclude any botanicals with round aromas (anise lurks everywhere.  The anise aroma can actually be found in green Chartreuse but the aroma is locked up by the high alcohol.  When the proof gets cut the anise aroma is more free to be volatile).

Another great olfactory construct which relies heavily on searching for universal symbolism in western culture is the “temporal olfactory construct” which separates aromas based on a time association with them; does an aroma remind you of the past or the future?  Just like we enjoy the clash of the round and angular, we also enjoy the violent juxtaposition of the past and future (and often both constructs overlap).  Examples of backward looking aromas in western culture would be the garden of eden fruits and antiseptic preservative aromas like juniper, sage, and wormwood.  Forward looking aromas are often exotic like coconut, pineapple, demerera rum, or cognac.  Some aromas like cherry have a tonal range and can point in both directions.  Cherry liqueurs like Heering point towards the past with their stodgy density while forward looking Kirschwasser glows aromatically in a neon sort of way after being liberated from involatile aromas via distillation.  Famous temporal juxtapositions would be gin (epic olfactory tension!) with purifying juniper contrasted with exotic saffron and orange peel or absinthe with glowing futuristic anise contrasted with ancient preservative wormwood, but of course it is all culturally relative.  These days we have lost touch with the symbols and our reference points are too personal.  The olfactory literacy rate being so low really stifles the art.

The emotional content that olfactory symbolism creates makes aromatic tonality very significant though overlooked.  Ferran Adria might have  made playing with texture the hot topic, and texture has its own emotional content (as well as makes for good fluffy journalism), but aromatic tonality is where its at (not to diminish Adria, I bet his team is really into aroma and I’d really love to hear what they have to say about it).  Shifting the shade or tone of an aroma charges it emotionally, but we talk about it strangely.  When you see tasting notes for wines that address aromatic roundness they are always written as “fruit comma fruit comma fruit comma etcetera”.  The commas lead one to believe the wine will have all those aromas, (maybe in intervals or via a true time element provided by rapid oxidation in the glass) but somehow the shade of round aroma really exists between the fruits (beautiful mermaid-grotesque!).  When we abstract and build wines, we aspire to push and pull aroma into this unknown space between the knowns.  We need to trade the commas for another logical operator that indicates between-ness.

Admitting a love for the space between two knowns does not solve much.  We still can’t comfortably articulate in conversation shades of strange aromas like “organic earthiness” in a wine (in my eyes the most emotionally charged of all wine aromas!).  My favorite shades are emotionally very sensual and romantic because of their similarity to animal aromas and can even be divided symbolically into the masculine and feminine.  Other organic earth aromas at the far reaches of the spectrum are analogous to a white truffle that is past its prime (so sad!) and are in the negative end of my olfactory construct.  Using these analogies, in a hundred years will anyone understand my descriptors of the red wines of Bolgheri, and if Bolgheri never produces a bottle again, will anyone feel they found a similar shade of earth aroma in another part of the world?

Tonality and juxtaposition bring up another communication issue.  What exactly is “complexity” in a flavor experience and is it a useful descriptor?  The desire to call something “complex” seems like an instance where we settle for one word to market an experience, but we really need to divide it into multiple words to describe an experience.  Experiences of rare expressions of roundness often get called “complex” even when they don’t have any distinct intervals.  The same thing happens with angular aromas.  Is “complex” appropriate or should we say something like “distinct”, “rare”, or “enigmatic” to denote the out of the ordinary experience?  To me “complex” seems reserved for flavor experiences that have many intervals of aromas, employ many planes of taste, and maybe even a have a time sensitive evolution via rapid oxidation.

My favorite spirit at the moment is Medronho from the Algarve region of Portugal.  Medronho is a brandy made from the “strawberry tree” or Arbutus.  Nothing is more esoteric or made under rarer circumstances.  I could easily call the brandy “spectacular” or “balanced” (hells no!) and market Medronho to all, but I can’t really call it complex.  The aroma of the brandy basically consists of a strange, distinct, pungent aroma very much like Tobasco minus the vinegar and another mousey-autolytic aroma similar to what you find in some Champagnes (who knows if it is from yeast autolysis).  There is the typical taste structure of a distillate plus the two distinct aromatic intervals.  The juxtaposition is as strange as it gets and the aromas are rare for a fruit brandy, but complex does not fit the bill.  I’ll settle for distinct or even avante-garde relative to the normal western culinary experience. Medronho has no counterpart.

The dissonant nature of some experiences challenges another word that we commonly use in our culinary marketing.  Everything in culinary seems to be “balanced”, but the word has a lot of problems.  Balance does not seem to have any provisions for cultural relativity and cannot account for the acquired tastes that drive modern culinary art.  We can build in cultural relativity or we can switch to another word.  The musical world has championed the word “harmony” and sorted out every nuance of its use.  Harmony is relative because of consonance and dissonance which have been acknowledged to be flexible and always in motion.  Arnold Schoenberg famously stated that there is no dissonance and rather “a dissonance is a further removed consonance that we have yet to absorb.”  Schoenberg’s learned harmony idea opens up a world of acquired tastes that balance, with its fixed connotations, closes off.  There is a new crop of foodies out there whose hobby is essentially acquiring acquired tastes.

Tossing the art of dissonance metabolizing fetishists into the market is dangerous because of our mastery of marketing.  We so easily sell acquired tastes to people that are not ready for them, creating dissatisfaction and potentially hindering the progress of expanding harmony.  Embracing plane consciousness in communication might be a solution.  If we describe the direction of planes to summarize spatial effect (identifying the dissonant space in few articulate words), we can keep people that shouldn’t be from swimming in the avante-garde of culinary art.

Culinary communication is an art in itself.  The task of communicating what artists consciously abstract into the synesthetic unknown is a crazy proposition.  Hopefully plane consciousness, olfactory constructs, culturally relative harmony, and acknowledgment of grotesque tonality will give us an edge.  Ahead of us, we have static recipes to build so we can preserve the complicated “ethics” of our culinary heritage.  There are monumental works that still need to be maintained and modern symbolism that still needs to be explored.   It would be nice if through more discourse, the art of culinary communication will catch up to culinary art itself.

May 8, 2010

daiquiri; an analysis

daiquiri

x oz. rum

y oz. lime juice

z g. sugar

the daiquiri is an iconic drink with no specific recipe.  what one believes a daiquiri should be, is all subject to the principles of cultural relativity.  this relative concept is significant because of how polarized western food ways are.  one might find another’s daiquiri to be undrinkably sweet, too tart, or too alcoholic.  hemingway often enjoyed a sugarless daiquiri that most imbibers would find very extreme and probably inharmonious.

with just three ingredients (plus some water!) there is a multitude of options.  rum, which fortifies the drink, is the most diverse spirits category there is.  the range of rum’s aromas is staggering and hard to fully outline.  rum aromas can range from simplistic (and very common in culinary) like caramel or vanilla to rare like iodine, or the enigmatic and un-nameable.  the appeal of rum aromas are also subject to a lot of culturally relative symbolism.  each of us has an “olfactory construct” which we use to categorize aromatic experiences and attach meaning.  in western culture there are some aromas with close to universal symbolism but classification is also often very personal.  to me, the aroma of caramel in rum is a negative.  i find caramel boring and try to avoid rums dominated by the aroma.  i don’t want my rum to go through some elaborate process and end up smelling like something i could just make in my kitchen.  yet the market speaks and those rums sell well.  within rum, many people probably hold the caramel aroma favorably in their olfactory construct.  symbols can congeal.  maybe i used to like caramel as well, but experiences can make your olfactory construct shift.

for many, a daiquiri takes shape with an intense plane of acid.  limes have a very consistent amount of acidity, but their aromas can vary significantly.  the lime aroma is very piney and angular in nature, but the degree of its intensity varies significantly with the lime.  sometimes when limes have a yellowed skin, the aroma of their juice can be obnoxious, overly piney and very hard to enjoy.  if the lime has dimpled skin, the rind is usually very thick and there is little juice inside.  limes with the best juice economy and most elegant aroma are not so intensely green as dimpled limes, don’t feel solid, and have very smooth skin.  these are what growers strive to put on the market.

the character of the sugar source for a daiquiri can vary drastically.  bleached and highly refined white sugars are not aromatic.  bleached sugar sweetness to the daiquiri’s structure but no aromatic contrast to the rum and lime. on the other hand, raw sugars can be distinct and highly aromatic.  at the far extreme, molasses is a concentrate of the aromatic part of sugar, separated during the refining process.  aromatic sugars have a density of aroma that can overshadow many nuances of a rum and should be used with that in mind.  using a sugar source with aroma also has the potential to make boring rums much more exciting.

the relationship of sugar to acid is where the majority of the daiquiri’s emotional content comes from.  aroma, its level of extract, and alcohol pull on these planes of structure, but they are not so significant or predictably manipulated.  the PH of the acid is hard to obsess over so it becomes easiest to describe the acid/sugar ratio as relative to a 400g/l sugar source in a 2:1:1 sour.

1.5 oz. rum (80 proof)

.75 oz. lime juice

.75 oz. sugar syrup (400g/l or very close to a common 1:1 simple syrup)

the above recipe really captures the average of most western tastes and is what is typically served in a restaurant scenario.  as the relative amount of sugar decreases, the drink can be described as “drier” and appealing to less imbibers on average while sometimes gaining in its ability to thrill a minority.  when producing daiquiris for others, the challenge becomes abstracting the drink to an idealized emotional state by changing the ratios of rum, lime, and sugar as well as other planes like temperature, dissolved gas and inhomogeneous elements like ice chips produced during shaking.

switching to stirred in granular sugar while trying to maintain a similar acid/sugar ethic decreases the overall volume of the drink and therefore you need to extrapolate.  using granular sugar without a scale takes intuition, but can increase the intensity of the spirit without having to use a higher proof bottling because the drink is not diluted with water from the syrup.

language to describe the emotional content of a drink is very underdeveloped and because food ways are so diverse, all we really have is trial and error when matching drinks to drinkers which can be costly.  unlike a painting which only needs to be painted once, every time a culinary work is consumed it needs to be produced which is not without expense.  we have developed language effective enough to sell drinks and make them seem enticing, but not effective enough for people to actually understand what they are getting with any precision.  most imbibers just shoot in the dark with a simplistic mentality of “i like ‘x’ trendy liqueur so i bet i’ll like any drink that features it”.  everybody gets by, but with such an asynchronous system (one side knows everything, the other side knows little) for new experiences, the art can’t go very far.  no one is likely to become the arnold schoenberg of mixology, expressing the tricky aspects of the zeitgeist which require new notions of flavor harmony.

anyhow, make my daiquiri like a Markovich Lissitzky or Wassily Kandisnky painting; abstracted and expressionist.  stretch it with the emotionally charged raring to go structure of a 250 gram sour pulled taught by low extract aroma (via non aromatic sugar!).  throw out those common “culinary” aromas.  i want my mind to wander through enigmatic, mermaid-grotesque, aged, cape verdean rum aromas terraced against the gentle piny-ness of a perfect lime.  forget those over oaked, lacquered up whiskey cocktails, this will be like a licking a green marble sculpture, shaped by structure and veined by aroma.  if you come from a snapple-sweet tea life style, be prepared to find out we don’t idealize the world the same way.

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