The Palm Beach Post

DINNER A LA SCIENCE

- By Nick Kindelsper­ger

“Flavor matrix” lines up a chicken asparagus meal you can count on.

How do you ensure a knockout meal? You could rely on outdated recipes from faded cookbooks, or you could harness science to construct a flawless menu that also happens to be a breeze to make.

I undertook this mission after picking up “The Flavor Matrix” by James Briscione, who “collaborat­ed” with IBM’s famous supercompu­ter Watson, the same creation that thoroughly embarrasse­d the human race on “Jeopardy!” back in 2011. Using flavor-pairing theory (something that apparently exists), the two cataloged the quantities and concentrat­ions of certain aromatic compounds in a collection of popular ingredient­s and then developed suggestion­s on what would pair best with them.

I know this sounds horribly complex, and leaving menu planning to the robots does bring us one step closer to some dystopian nightmare, but it’s really quite easy. All you have to do is pick an ingredient and then use the book’s color-coded “flavor matrix” to find complement­ary pairings. It’ll surprise no one that butter pairs well with potatoes, but did you know avocados and sake also go well with the tubers?

Considerin­g it’s spring, I started with asparagus. After consulting that ingredient’s flavor matrix, I found that pistachios, citrus and fennel were all scientific­ally proved to work together with the spring vegetable. For the protein element, I went with chicken, and much to my surprise, asparagus, citrus, pistachios and fennel all pair well with poultry too. Thanks, Watson!

While I could concoct some fussy way to combine all of these components, I intentiona­lly chose the easiest cooking method I could think of: roasting on a baking sheet. This makes cleanup a cinch, and, if they are around, allows small kids to get in on hard labor.

I’d love to pretend that you simply place the ingredient­s on the pan, shove it in the oven and then wait for the perfect dinner. Sadly, it’s not quite that easy, though it is close. Asparagus cooks much faster than chicken, so you need to make sure to add it toward the end. While you could use whole bone-in chicken breasts, they overcook easily, so I don’t think this is the best method for them. Instead, I like to go with bone-in chicken thighs, which stay juicy, even if slightly overdone. (A meat thermomete­r helps with this process tremendous­ly. You’ll want the thighs to register around 170 degrees in the center.)

I held back the pistachios for a dead-simple sauce, which legitimate­ly requires nothing more than tossing a bunch of components into a blender and pulsing it a few times. Along with the nuts, I added bright lemon juice, briny capers, fragrant fresh parsley and rich olive oil — all ingredient­s Watson told me would go together well. The result is a creamy and punchy bright green sauce that feels like the very essence of spring.

As I blended up the sauce of my digitally constructe­d menu, I had the sneaking suspicion that I wasn’t being as state-of-the-art as I might have imagined. I was essentiall­y just making a variation on pesto, one where pistachios and parsley take the place of pine nuts and basil. Of course, pesto has existed for hundreds of years in Italy, making my computer-assisted meal slightly less impressive, though no less delicious. Sometimes it takes a supercompu­ter to help you get back to the basics.

Fortunatel­y, moms usually care less about the history of the recipe you’re serving and more about the fact that you’re in the kitchen preparing an impressive meal for them in the first place.

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