The flavour factor: undoing the Dorito effect
$1:
The flavour factor: undoing the Dorito effect
MARK SCHATZKER
Contributed to The Globe and Mail
Published Tuesday, Apr. 28 2015, 1:54 PM EDT
That 14-week-old pasture-raised barred rock chicken was (and remains) the best fried chicken I have ever tasted. This was not a rational measurement of chicken quality based on crispiness, juiciness and “fried chicken flavour,” the way it happens in a sensory evaluation. This was get-up-out-of-your-chair-and-start-dancing fried chicken.
I had given up on chicken because it was too bland. Modern chicken needed honey, soy sauce, garlic and smoked paprika. A chef I know told me he never cooked chicken without brining it first. Chicken was like a terrible date: high maintenance and boring.
I found a hatchery not far from Toronto that’s popular with Mennonite farmers that had barred rock chicks for sale and arranged for 100 or so hatchlings to be delivered to a friend’s farm. After a few weeks on starter feed, they goose-stepped into the greenery like they owned the place and began pecking in their terrifically precise way at blades of grass, slugs, frogs, seeds and, once, a snake. At 14 weeks, they were more than double the age of supermarket broilers and around half the size. They were entering the now-vanished phase of poultry delectability called the “fryer” stage, a prescription as much as a description. One afternoon, we killed the biggest barred rock in my friend’s flock. Beneath the great puff of black-and-white feathers was something small and bony. The skin was yellow and the fat inside the carcass was darker yellow. It didn’t look like chicken. It looked like a dead bird.
There were only 21/2 pounds of dead bird, bones included, so my wife and I waited until the kids went to bed to eat it. I got out my favourite cookbook from the salt-and-pepper era, 1902’s The Ideal Cook Book. This, of course, is when the knock comes at the door. It was my wife’s friend and her husband.
Come in, come in. How about a beer? But won’t you stay for dinner?
Won’t you stay for some dead bird?
The plan was as follows: Fill up on corn on the cob. Fill up on salad. Because there wasn’t enough dead bird for four adults. Our guests politely eyed the puny main course, which looked like I’d strangled it in its nest. I cut the 14-week-old barred rock into pieces, seasoned them with salt and pepper, dragged them through flour, and fried them in a cast-iron pan filled with a shallow layer of hot oil. When the chicken was brown and crispy on all sides, I poured a sip of water into the pan, slammed a lid on top, let it steam for 20 minutes, removed the lid and cranked the flame back up. The chicken was now golden brown and crispy. And even smaller than before.
And my, what a chicken. The stages of pleasure went as follows: incredulity, astonishment, elation, glowing thankfulness. There were declarations featuring the words “awesome,” “best” and “unbelievable.” We were drunk on chicken. Most amazing of all, somehow there were leftovers.
Two months later, I visited one of this continent’s more storied fried-chicken spots, a Memphis joint that has been dunking breasts and drumsticks into batter and then hot fat for decades. However old the restaurant was, the broilers it was serving up were ultramodern – plump, meaty and bland. The exterior perfectly executed the Dorito model: crispy, fatty and loaded with MSG. The actual meat beneath it was as dry as toilet paper. And yet I couldn’t seem to stop eating it. I ate till the bucket was empty.
There was never any McRegret with heirloom fried chicken, just love and happiness – and unexpectedly small portions.
Something was up with this chicken.
Chicken doesn’t taste like chicken
If ever there was such a thing as a golden age of chicken flavour science, it is long over. Back in 1954, scientists Marion Sweetman and Ingeborg MacKellar posed the important question: Do male chickens taste different from females? The answer was yes, they taste stronger. Four years later, science confirmed that the difference extended to chicken soup. In 1962, 28-month-old chickens were found to be more flavourful than 19- and nine-week-old chickens. And in 1965, it was found that “muscle from young and old chickens had similar chemical constituents, but the older ones had larger concentrations.”
As chickens lost flavour, however, poultry science stopped studying flavour. It was about quantity, efficiency and price. Flavour didn’t matter. That’s what flavour solutions were for.
The number of poultry scientists today specializing in chicken flavour can be counted on a single hand. One of them is Linda Farmer, who works at Belfast’s Agri-Food and Biosciences Institute. Farmer told me that despite the shortage of research, we can be sure that chickens acquire flavour in two ways. The first is through diet. Simply put, what chickens eat ends up in their bodies. This is why modern broiler farmers add a yellow pigment to chicken feed – so the chickens on the supermarket shelf will look the same as chickens that have been running around outside eating leaves. As to exactly what delectable substances are making their way into the flesh of, say, a 14-week-old pasture-raised barred rock? No one cares.
There is also the issue of age. In 1997, Farmer did a study that found older chickens have more flavour. Exactly why they have more flavour – which compounds accumulate in a chicken versus which ones get filtered out – remains a mystery no one is keen to solve because there’s no research money in it.
When it comes to nutrition, the picture is clearer. In 2009, a seminal figure in British nutrition named Michael Crawford, of London’s Institute of Brain Chemistry and Human Nutrition, compared chickens of today with chickens of times past. Humans aren’t the only ones who are way fatter than they used to be. Back in 1870, a 100-gram (31/2-ounce) piece of chicken contained just under 4 grams of fat. By 1970, that number had risen to 8.6 grams, and by 2004 chicken was packing more than 20 grams. As Crawford dryly noted, “While chicken was at one time a lean, low-fat food, it is no longer.” Less dryly, he asked, “Does eating obesity cause obesity in the consumer?”
Death by blandness
Everything, in the end, is toxic. Even water and oxygen can kill you. It is all a question of dose. And that’s the other problem with Doritos, Memphis fried chicken, soft drinks and other Doritoesque foods: They’re too non-toxic. They are so non-toxic that there’s nothing limiting intake, so we overconsume them and, over time, all that fat, sugar and carbs ends up becoming toxic. The calories build up in our bodies and interfere with our circulation, choke off parts of our hearts, wear out our joints and blow out our pancreases. Obesity and so many of the terrible conditions it causes come down to nothing more than calorie toxicity.
As humans mastered growing livestock and plants, however, we changed their ecological purpose. The reason animals produced meat wasn’t so that some human could eat it. Meat is muscle, which enables movement, and fat, which stores energy. Vegetables are the plant equivalent – structure and nutrient storage. A plant grew fruit or seeds not so that a human could bake pie but so that the plant could reproduce. Today, instead of eating living things designed by nature, we started doing the designing. And we got so good at it that food became very different. It’s a difference we still don’t fully understand but one we can most certainly taste.
Maybe the real problem is that good food has become bland?
The more I thought about it, the more it made sense. Broilers were bland and they were omega-6 fat bombs, not to mention nutritionally enfeebled compared with heirloom chicken. Doritos were originally bland, which is why people used to dip them in actual food such as bean dip and salsa and why they are now covered in chemicals that create the illusion of food. And all those high-yielding tomatoes, carrots and greens in the produce section are also bland, which is why people either don’t eat them or smother them in fatty dressings and sauces that blunt their nutrition. Blandness and our attempts to disguise it is the hidden scourge of our time.
The food problem is a flavour problem. For half a century, we’ve been making the stuff people should eat – fruits, vegetables, whole grains, unprocessed meats – incrementally less delicious. Meanwhile, we’ve been making the food people shouldn’t eat – chips, fast food, soft drinks, crackers – taste ever more exciting. The result is exactly what you’d expect.
This has been adapted and condensed from The Dorito Effect, published by Simon and Schuster.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/foo ... e24151856/
DrCaleb @ Tue Apr 28, 2015 12:23 pm

Good article!
I just saw a show about a restaurant that does the farm to table thing. They own the farm where everything comes from, and have consulted with seed producers and vegetable growers to breed plants and grains that result in the tastiest product. And they say it's amazing to produce for taste, instead of for profit!
I they are called 'Blue Hill' in New York.
https://www.bluehillfarm.com/dine/new-york
2Cdo @ Tue Apr 28, 2015 12:29 pm
I've had good farm raised chicken that was delicious but I don't think I would use the adjectives the article used.
Most of the meat I get is farm raised from local farms and almost all our vegetables are what we grow. The difference in flavour compared to store bought is almost like eating completely different vegetables.
DrCaleb @ Tue Apr 28, 2015 12:35 pm
2Cdo 2Cdo:
Most of the meat I get is farm raised from local farms and almost all our vegetables are what we grow. The difference in flavour compared to store bought is almost like eating completely different vegetables.
I broke down and bought a Hutterite chicken at the farmers market. It was absolutely fantastic! I don't know if it was worth what I paid for it, but it was the best chicken I've had since we raised our own. I don't recall what breed the lady said they were, but they were not the bland pale white things you get in a supermarket.
One of the best things I ever did for my palette so far is learning how to cook some vegetarian dishes.
![Drool [drool]](./images/smilies/droolies.GIF)
Seriously, some of the tastes involved are just incredible!
2Cdo @ Tue Apr 28, 2015 12:50 pm
DrCaleb DrCaleb:
2Cdo 2Cdo:
Most of the meat I get is farm raised from local farms and almost all our vegetables are what we grow. The difference in flavour compared to store bought is almost like eating completely different vegetables.
I broke down and bought a Hutterite chicken at the farmers market. It was absolutely fantastic! I don't know if it was worth what I paid for it, but it was the best chicken I've had since we raised our own. I don't recall what breed the lady said they were, but they were not the bland pale white things you get in a supermarket.
One of the best things I ever did for my palette so far is learning how to cook some vegetarian dishes.
![Drool [drool]](./images/smilies/droolies.GIF)
Seriously, some of the tastes involved are just incredible!
I agree. When I'm at home we try to do 1 or 2 vegetarian meals each week. With some different herbs and spices it is very tasty indeed.
DrCaleb @ Tue Apr 28, 2015 12:59 pm
I like to cook Indian.
They've been mostly vegetarians for thousands of years, so they know how to do it right!
Malai Mutter Pannier.
One of my favourite recipes, and sooo good!
I do it a bit different, but this is close:
http://www.khanakhazana.com/recipes/view.aspx?id=4264
2Cdo @ Tue Apr 28, 2015 1:02 pm
DrCaleb DrCaleb:
I like to cook Indian.
![Drool [drool]](./images/smilies/droolies.GIF)
They've been mostly vegetarians for thousands of years, so they know how to do it right!
Malai Mutter Pannier.
![Drool [drool]](./images/smilies/droolies.GIF)
One of my favourite recipes, and sooo good!
I do it a bit different, but this is close:
http://www.khanakhazana.com/recipes/view.aspx?id=4264Unfortunately my Indian vegetarian cooking involves an ample portion of lamb.
But I do love Indian food. Lots of flavour, mild to nuclear heat, vegetables not often seen in N American cooking.
I don't mind borrowing things from vegetarian cuisine but don't mind me if I pair them with fresh fish, aged beef, fresh chicken, or etc.
And my own quirk I brought back with me from overseas is a sometimes distressing craving for durian. I enjoy it, I love the taste, but at the same time there's something distantly revolting to me about it. Kinda like a Big Mac.
herbie @ Tue Apr 28, 2015 7:41 pm
Served Lamb Vindaloo one night, but I'd bought the flavoring from an EI store in Abbotsford. Assuming it was like the Superstore stuff I used the whole jar.
The old lady loves hot hot hot foods, but WTF are you trying to kill me?
Being stubborn I kept eating, it IS a wwe bit spicy... gave up, tears and sweat running down my face after half a plateful...
and I fully agree, the boneless, skinless frozen chicken breast (that ALL women insist on buying in huge quantities) is the blandest, most tasteless shit this side of plain tofu.
Sounds like you mistook vindaloo paste for vindaloo sauce maybe.
herbie @ Tue Apr 28, 2015 10:55 pm
BeaverFever BeaverFever:
Sounds like you mistook vindaloo paste for vindaloo sauce maybe.
No shit I did!
Best chicken I had was when I worked in Chilliwack. The marketing board guys would do an annual quota check and the farmers would sell off their chickens beforehand. We'd trade them the flats the old style rental phones came in, they'd fill them up with a dozen roasting hens for $20.
Worst was when I lived in Langley a couple miles from the border. The Scot father in law stocked up for a BBQ at our house as chicken was only about 49c/lb down there. THe grease trap overflowed, the chicken was tasteless and there were these huge chunks of discolored meat on the birds. Fucking tumors. Legal to sell like that in Washington at the time. Turned me off chicken for years.
2Cdo @ Wed Apr 29, 2015 5:29 am
BeaverFever BeaverFever:
Sounds like you mistook vindaloo paste for vindaloo sauce maybe.
Yep. Vindaloo is awesome for clearing the sinuses.
2Cdo 2Cdo:
Unfortunately my Indian vegetarian cooking involves an ample portion of lamb.
But I do love Indian food. Lots of flavour, mild to nuclear heat, vegetables not often seen in N American cooking.
![Drool [drool]](./images/smilies/droolies.GIF)
I'm more of a slow braised lamb shanks sort of guy.
![Drool [drool]](./images/smilies/droolies.GIF)
Nothing wrong with a good feed! I just steer more to the vegetables for my health, among other reasons.
BartSimpson BartSimpson:
And my own quirk I brought back with me from overseas is a sometimes distressing craving for durian. I enjoy it, I love the taste, but at the same time there's something distantly revolting to me about it.
I've never tried it, mainly because I've heard it's best fresh, and I live a long way from where it grows. I have seen it frozen in the local Asian supermarket - is it any good thawed? I wouldn't want to try it if it's not representative of the 'good stuff'.
OK had Durian in Bali and though it tastes not bad smells like moldy socks. If you can get by the smell you may like it
durian....vile.....vile.....vile. Why would you want to try and get to tasting something that smells that bad(rotting garbage). It's like trying to eat stinky tofu(cho dofu). Why would I want to eat something that smells like dog shit? A buddy of mine who visited us while overseas tried it at a night market.....he had a bunch of locals gather round while he tried it. They howled at his reaction. I've had jackfruit. It's like a combination of strong raw onion and cantaloupe. I like both.