Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Maillard Reaction = Good Eats


Maillard reaction

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
If you brown it it will taste better. Here is why...




The Maillard reaction (French pronunciation: [majaŹ], mah-yar) is a form of nonenzymatic
browning similar to caramelization. It results from a chemical reaction between anamino 
acid and a reducing sugar, usually requiring heat.


Vitally important in the preparation or presentation of many types of food, it is named after 
chemist Louis-Camille Maillard, who first described it in the 1910s while attempting to 
reproduce biological protein synthesis. The reactive carbonyl group of the sugar reacts with 
the nucleophilic amino group of the amino acid, and forms a complex mixture of 
poorly-characterized molecules responsible for a range of odors and flavors. This process is 
accelerated in an alkaline environment, as the amino groups are deprotonated and, hence, 
have an increased nucleophilicity. The type of the amino acid determines the resulting flavor. 
This reaction is the basis of the flavoring industry. At high temperatures, acrylamide 
can be formed. 


In the process, hundreds of different flavor compounds are created. These compounds, 
in turn, break down to form yet more new flavor compounds, and so on. Each type of food 
has a very distinctive set of flavor compounds that are formed during the Maillard reaction. 
It is these same compounds flavor scientists have used over the years to create reaction flavors.