What is smell? How does it work? And why is it so important?
HAROLD McGEE, leading expert on the science of food and cooking, has spent a decade exploring our most overlooked sense.
Nose Dive is the amazing result: it takes us on an adventure across four billion years and the whole globe, from the sulphurous early Earth to the fruit-filled Tian Shan mountain range north of the Himalayas, and back to the keyboard of your laptop, where trace notes of phenol and formaldehyde are escaping between the keys.
A work of astounding scholarship and originality, Nose Dive distils the science behind smells and translates it into an accessible and entertaining sensory and olfactory guide. We'll sniff the ordinary (wet pavement and cut grass) and extraordinary (ambergris and truffles), the delightful (roses and vanilla) and the challenging (swamplands and durians). We'll smell each other. We'll smell ourselves. Here is a story of the world, of all of the smells under our noses.
DIVE IN!
Review
Ever since Heston Blumenthal credited Harold McGee with teaching him the science behind his cooking, he has been the food nerd's favourite geek . . . Now I know why a sip of wine can make even perfectly fresh fish taste fishy (solution: a squeeze of lemon juice) and I've learnt the name for one of summer's most redolent smells: fresh rain on dry Tarmac ― The Times (Saturday Review), Food Book of the Year 2020
A tour-de-force . . . a superbly written odyssey around an underrated sense -- Clive Cookson ― Financial Times, Best Books of 2020: Science
A riveting read that's sure to be a classic ― The Independent, Food Books of 2020
A joyously nerdy study of how and what we smell, the effect on our appetites and much more. He has a boffin's approach to detail but the hungry person's passion to boot ― Sunday Times
Nose Dive opens up a world full of wonder . . . enthralling, extraordinary, life-affirming -- DIANA HENRY ― Daily Telegraph
Deeply researched . . . Reading Mr. McGee, mostly in isolation, I started to pay more attention to the information in the air, to jot down notes about the mundane fragments floating around me as I whiffed them in -- TEJAL RAO ― International New York Times
if you're ready to lean in and really smell the roses, Harold can show you the way ― Waitrose Weekend
Fascinating ― Guardian Feast
A no-holds barred book which explains why we love the foods we love . . . and will actually enrich your love of food -- Radio 4 The Food Programme
This keenly awaited volume is not exactly a food book, but it is the reference book that will make everything you eat seem more interesting. . . He explains everything from why fruits smell so delicious to the way that cooking can transform the scent of ingredients such as onions from pungent to sweet. There is fascination and delight on every page ― Sunday Times (Culture)
An ambitious and enormous work . . . McGee's breadth is demonstrated by his cosmological starting point ― Spectator
McGee is a food scientist who has produced some of the most important research on the subject: he is a hero to any chef worth his or her salt -- Stephen Harris ― Daily Telegraph
About the Author
Harold McGee writes about the chemistry of food and cooking, and the science of everyday life. He has worked alongside some of world's most innovative chefs, including Thomas Keller and Heston Blumenthal. He lives with his family in California.