Harold McGee

Harold McGee

Author and lecturer

https://www.curiouscook.com
Harold McGee writes about the chemistry of food and cooking. Harold took up this odd vocation after studies at the California Institute of Technology and at Yale University, where he wrote a doctoral thesis with the prophetic title "Keats and the Progress of Taste." After several years as a literature and writing instructor at Yale, Harold decided to practice what he’d been teaching, and write a book: a book about the science of everyday life. The result was the publication in 1984 of a 680-page compendium, On Food & Cooking: The Science & Lore of the Kitchen. Six years after On Food & Cooking, in 1990, Harold published a shorter and more personal book, The Curious Cook: More Kitchen Science and Lore. It's currently out of print. Then in 2004, after working on it for ten years, Harold published the second, completely revised and significantly expanded edition of On Food & Cooking, which won several awards. And in 2010, Penguin Press published his practical kitchen handbook Keys to Good Cooking: A Guide to Making the Best of Foods and Recipes. Along the way Harold has contributed reviews and original research to the scientific journal Nature, and has written articles for many publications, including The World Book Encyclopedia, The Art of Eating, Food & Wine, Fine Cooking, and Physics Today. For five years Harold contributed a column on science and food, "The Curious Cook," to the New York Times. Harold has taught two-day courses at the French Culinary Institute in New York, and talks about food chemistry at such venues as the Culinary Institute of America and other professional schools, at Madrid Fusion, at universities, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and the American Chemical Society. Since 2010, he has been a visiting lecturer at Harvard University in their course "Science and Cooking: From Haute Cuisine to Soft Matter Science." Harold is currently working on a book about smells and flavors.

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Features & Stories

Bring on the digital recipe revolution

Bring on the digital recipe revolution

Former chef and restaurateur Chris Lawrence ponders how books by Auguste Escoffier and Harold McGee, written a century apart, have had a profound effect on the way that chefs, recipe writers, and home cooks think about food and how they cook. He argues for more care to be taken in recipe creation – and tells why he welcomes the digital recipe revolution