Food and Science meet with a pop, and a fizz in "Science you can Eat" by Stefan Gates.
Stefan is a brilliant host in this amusing and utterly fascinating look at our food, and the way our bodies work with it, combined with a ton of awesome recipes and experiments to keep you and your little ones busy in the long summer hols.
We busied ourselves getting right down to the nitty gritty of trying out some of the experiments in this book. Spit and custard? OK We did skip that one, as it sounded a little bit too gross - but learning how our saliva works on our food to make it easier to digest was actually one of the more interesting bits of this book.
We also found out why popcorn pops, why Space Dust fizzes and explodes on our tongues, and - er - why baked beans make your trousers trumpet!
Let's have a look inside this fabulous book!
Our tongues are amazing. Not just for poking out at your teacher or politicians, they're amazingly sensitive to a whole range of flavours and tastes |
Yeah we always cry when we slice an onion because we think about all their little onion brothers and sisters missing them. SOB! |
We all scream for ice cream!! Yum! |
Sum this book up in a sentence: The perfect book for the long summer hols, round up your pet adults and get busy with a ton of fabulous food-based experiments to tantalise your tastebuds and stimulate your brain!
"Science you can Eat" by Stefan Gates is out now, published by Dorling Kindersley (kindly supplied for review).