Title
Flavor Network And The Principles Of Food Pairing
Abstract
The cultural diversity of culinary practice, as illustrated by the variety of regional cuisines, raises the question of whether there are any general patterns that determine the ingredient combinations used in food today or principles that transcend individual tastes and recipes. We introduce a flavor network that captures the flavor compounds shared by culinary ingredients. Western cuisines show a tendency to use ingredient pairs that share many flavor compounds, supporting the so-called food pairing hypothesis. By contrast, East Asian cuisines tend to avoid compound sharing ingredients. Given the increasing availability of information on food preparation, our data-driven investigation opens new avenues towards a systematic understanding of culinary practice.
Year
DOI
Venue
2011
10.1038/srep00196
SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Keywords
Field
DocType
statistical significance,culture,taste
Biotechnology,Flavoring Agents,Ingredient,Cultural diversity,Pairing,Flavor,Marketing,Taste Threshold,Business
Journal
Volume
ISSN
Citations 
1
2045-2322
76
PageRank 
References 
Authors
4.81
4
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Yong-Yeol Ahn12124138.24
Sebastian E. Ahnert2858.17
James P. Bagrow328126.25
Albert-lászló Barabási446491107.35