EFTA01779123.pdf
dataset_10 PDF 360.4 KB • Feb 4, 2026 • 4 pages
From: Boris Nikolic (bgC3)
Sent: Sunday, February 13,
To: Jeffrey Epstein
Subject: FW: Nathan's cookbook
Forgot to mention you, in the case that you already d=d not see it.
The Game-Changing Cookbook
Nathan Myhrvold's 2,400-page 'Modernist=Cuisine' upends everything you thought you knew about cooking</=pan>
N=than Myhrvold
<=pan style=lont-size:7.5pt;font-family:"Arial","sans-serif";color:black'=
=/a>Here's the recipe for the most astonishing cookbook of our=time: Take one multimillionaire computer genius, a
team of 36 researchers,=chefs and editors and a laboratory specially built for cooking experiments= After nearly four
years of obsessive research, assemble 2,400 pages of re=ults into a 47-pound, six-volume collection that costs $625 and
requires f=ur pounds of ink to print.
To call inventor Nathan Myhrvold's "Modernist Cuisine= The Art & Science of Cooking," on sale next month, a
"cookb=ok" is akin to calling James Joyce's "Ulysses" "a stor=." The book is a large-scale investigation into the math,
science and=physics behind cooking tasks from making juicy and crisp beer-can chicken =o coating a foie-gras bonbon in
sour cherry gel. There is precedent in thi= genre—science writer Harold McGee has published popular books expla=ning
kitchen science, and chefs Thomas Keller and Ferran Adrib have writ=en about sous vide and other techniques of avant-
garde gastronomy—bu= nothing reaches the scope and magnitude of Mr. Myhrvold's book. While it =ill likely appeal to
professional chefs, within its pages are insights tha= even the humblest home cooks can use to improve their meals. The
book put= traditional cooking wisdom under scientific scrutiny, destroying old assu=ptions and creating new cooking
approaches.
More
=nbsp; <=>My 30-Course Dinner at Nathan's: The Most Exciting Meal of a Food =riter's Life
<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB100014240527487=3786804576138362185210494.html>
<http://online.wsj.r.om/article/SB10001424052748703786804576138362185210494.html> Ryan Matthew Smith,
Modernist Cuisine
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"Beef Stew"
The man behind the tome is a former chie= technology officer for Microsoft and an inventor of hundreds of patents (=e
invented an electromagnetic car engine and is seeking a patent for his F=ench fries treated with starch and placed in an
ultrasonic bath). Though m=ny of Mr. Myhrvold's 51 years have been devoted to math and science —=y the age of 23, he
held two master's degrees and a doctorate in mathemati=al physics from Princeton—in the 1990s, his passion for food
began t= loom large. First, he got deeply into barbecue (he was on the "team =f the year" at the Memphis World
Championship Barbecue Cooking Contes= in 1991), and then moved onto haute cuisine.
"My=career at Microsoft really was getting in the way of my cooking," sai= Mr. Myhrvold. After leaving Microsoft in
1999, he launched Intellectual V=ntures, an invention and patent firm, and in 2007, with help from two youn=,
scientifically-minded chefs, Chris Young and Maxime Bilet, he began work=on the book. When publishers balked over
the size and scope of the project= Mr. Myhrvold said, he ditched the conventional route and decided to self-=ublish
through his publishing company, the Cooking Lab.<=p>
To call=inventor Nathan Myhrvold's "Modernist Cuisine: The Art & Science =f Cooking," on sale next month, a
"cookbook" is akin to cal=ing James Joyce's "Ulysses" "a story."
Among the book's revelations: Expensive pots and pans are a waste of m=ney. Organic food is no healthier than non-
organic. Black coffee cools off=faster than coffee with cream.
We pored over the book =nd selected some of our favorite counterintuitive nuggets of wisdom. You'l= never think about
frying, boiling or making pizza the same way again.
PROBLEM #1: Your pan-fried food comes
out soggy and greasy.
SOLUTION: Use more oil. </=:p>
Before shallow-frying, pour oil into a pan that is equivalent=to nearly half the depth of your food. Heat it well and fry the
food. When=done, drain on a rack and blot excess oil with paper towels. The food will=be crisp and less greasy than if
you had skimped on the oil.
WHAT'S GOING ON: When food heat=, water escaping from the food creates a tiny layer of steam that lifts th= food off
the bottom of the pan. If there's not enough oil in the pan, the=food will not make contact with the oil. That means that
instead of frying= it steams, and then merely absorbs the oil, sponge-like, upon contact. Wi=h a thick enough layer of oil
the food will have full surface-contact with=the oil and will fry—and properly fried food does not actually absor= much
oil.
PROBLEM #2: The first batches of yo=r deep-fried food don't come out crispy enough.
SOLUTION: Use a bit of old oil.
Each time you deep fry, cool down t=e used oil and keep a couple of tablespoons in the refrigerator. Next time=you
deep fry, add about a tablespoon of the old oil to the pot along with =resh oil, and bring it to temperature for about 10
minutes before frying. =o:p>
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'Modernist Cuisine'
'Modernist Cuisine'
by Nathan Myhrvold
$625
WHAT'S GOING ON: <=strong>It's a "free-radical reaction." When deep-fr=ing in perfectly fresh oil, escaping water from
the food creates a barrier=of water and steam. This prevents even browning. However, after several ba=ches of food
have had contact with the oil, free radicals begin to break d=wn the oil into natural emulsifiers, changing the oil's
chemical structure=and allowing it to get in closer contact with the food. =/p>
PROBLEM #3: You love Neopolitan-style pizza, but don't want to in=est in a brick oven.
SOLUTION: Make an oven out of a steel sheet.
Get a 'A-inch-thick sheet of steel from a metal f=bricator (Google a local one), have it cut to the size of your oven shelf
=nd insert it in the rack closest to the broiler. Preheat the oven at its h=ghest temperature for % hour, then turn on the
broiler and slide your pi=za onto the metal plate. It should emerge perfectly cooked in 1.5 to 2 min=tes.
WHAT'S GOING ON: Pizza in a brick oven cooks at about 800 degrees—way hotter tha= the highest setting of most home
ovens. The metal sheet is more conductiv= than a brick oven's stone, so it can cook just as fast at a lower tempera=ure.
PROBLEM #4: You can't make perfect fish.<=span>
SOLUTION: Broil i= in wine.
In an oven-pro=f pan, lay a piece of fish on a bed of onions, fennel or another aromatic.=Pour wine to nearly cover the
fish, leaving only the skin uncovered. Place=the pan under a hot top-heated broiler and cook until the skin is crisp; t=e
exact timing will vary widely depending on the thickness of the fish and=other factors. Remove from broiler, insert a
digital thermometer and wait =ntil the fish reaches the desired temperature (somewhere between 120 and 1=0 degrees
is often optimal). If the fish does not reach temperature, heat =he pan gently on the stove top until it does. The fish will
be tender, wit= crispy skin.
WHAT'S GOING ON: "Evaporative cooling" is at work here. The alcohol=in the wine evaporates so rapidly that it cools the
wine, keeping it from =etting too hot and overcooking the fish. Meanwhile, the broiler crisps the=skin to perfection.
PROBLEM #5: You want homem=de chicken stock, but you don't have eight hours to kill.<=pan lang=EN style='font-
size:10.0pt;font-family:"Arial","sans-serif";c=lor:black.>
SOLUTION: Chop small to chop time=
Pulse the ingredients (=ypically, carrot, onion and celery) in a food processor until very finely =iced; remove vegetables,
add boneless chicken pieces and puree. Chop chick=n wings into tiny pieces. Brown all the chicken, then add vegetables
and c=ver with water. Simmer for an hour. The stock will attain the same flavor =t would have taken 8 hours with large
chunks.
WHAT'S GOING ON: "Fick's first law of diffusivity" is at work. This=principal indicates that flavor molecules have a
shorter distance to trave= if the pieces of food are smaller, and thus will be extracted more quickl=.
W=ite to Katy McLaughlin at
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- Document ID
- 90101ae1-fe32-43c6-a5fa-25e4f61c2eff
- Storage Key
- dataset_10/8918/EFTA01779123.pdf
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- 8918e0c4f286dc4865e17e9156bd72d6
- Created
- Feb 4, 2026