The Missing Ingredient, Jenny Linford
The Missing Ingredient, Jenny Linford
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The Missing Ingredient
The Curious Role of Time in Food and Flavor

Author: Jenny Linford

Narrator: Karen Cass

Unabridged: 11 hr 38 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 03/26/2019

Categories: Nonfiction, Cooking


Synopsis

From hours in the oven to years in the barrel, this illuminating book examines the relationship between the cook and the clock, and the underappreciated impact that time has on our favorite dishes Two minutes into boiling an egg, the white isn’t set and the yolk is totally raw. After five minutes however, the white is fully set and the yolk slightly runny―a perfectly spoonable, soft-boiled egg. Boil for another three minutes for a set and tender yolk, or an additional five minutes for a fully set yolk. But be careful: once you boil the egg past ten minutes, you’ll have a crumbly yolk and dry, overly firm white. When it comes to boiled eggs, you may think you’re only dealing with one ingredient, but there is another less obvious, but still critical ingredient involved that should not be overlooked: time.The Missing Ingredient is the first book to consider the intrinsic yet often forgotten role of time in creating the flavors and textures we love. Through a series of encounters with ingredients, producers, cooks, artisans, and chefs, acclaimed author of The Chef’s Library Jenny Linford shows how, time and again, time itself is the invisible ingredient in our most cherished recipes. Playfully structured through different periods of time, the book examines the fast and slow, from the seconds it takes for sugar to caramelize to the centuries it takes for food heritage to be passed down from our ancestors. From the brevity of blanching and the days required in the crucial process of fermentation, to the months of slow ripening that make a great cheddar and the years needed for certain wines to reach their peak, Linford dissects each segment of time needed to cook―and enjoy―simple and intricate cuisine alike. Including vignettes from the immediacy of taste (seconds), the exactitude of pasta (minutes), and smoking and barbecuing meats (hours), to maturing cheese (weeks), infusing vanilla extract (months), and perfecting parmigiana and port (years), The Missing Ingredient is an enlightening and essential volume for foodies, bakers, home cooks, chefs, and anyone who appreciates a perfectly-executed dish.

About Jenny Linford

Jenny Linford is a food writer and a member of the Guild of Food Writers whose recipes and food articles have appeared in many outlets, including the Financial Times, Time Out, and Square Meal. She is the author of numerous books including The Chef's Library and Garlic, and editor of 1001 Restaurants You Must Experience Before You Die.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Navya on May 13, 2020

This was educational and fun! Linford presents essays of varying length (though all short) on different foods and related culinary technologies/practices, organized by the amount of time it takes to properly 'prepare' it. It covers a surprising breadth of culinary techniques, ingredients, technologi......more

Goodreads review by Alexandra on April 30, 2019

I don't remember how I came across this book - could have been through Gastropod? - but I thought it sounded like just my thing. Time as an ingredient makes a lot of sense, when you consider it! And overall, Linford does look at some interesting points in connecting food with time; I learned a few t......more

Goodreads review by Books To on April 04, 2025

Would I recommend this book? The answer is that it depends. This book is all about time, and if you haven't thought about how it is an ingredient in food then it could potentially open your eyes to the wonders that this ingredient can add to a dish. You'll definitely develop deeper understanding and......more

Goodreads review by Lex on December 14, 2019

This book is a quick read, unique in that it separates short, bite-sized stories about food and drink into sections based on the time the products take to cook or create. There are sections for seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks, months, years, and centuries, which is a fun construction. That said......more

Goodreads review by Andrea on October 23, 2018

"Time’s relationship with food is multifaceted and complex, extending far beyond the right cooking times for dishes. " As a cooking school grad and a professional cook for a number of years,the title of this book was intriguing. In a world that sees "instant" as good, time needs to be reintroduced in......more