Why Flavor Differences in Foods Cooked by Ovens and Microwaves?

Research by a UC Davis chemist offers an explanation for thedifferent flavors produced in food cooked in microwave andconventional ovens. Toasted and roasted flavors in conventionallycooked foods, which are typically lacking in microwaved foods, can be attributed to a difference in the quantity and quality of certain chemical compounds produced by the different cooking methods, according to Takayuki Shibamoto, professor and chair of the environmental toxicology department. Shibamoto used two analytical techniques known as gas chromatography and mass spectrometry to identify the chemicals produced by the two heating systems. He found that conventional heating produced significantly higher amounts of two groups of chemical compounds known as pyrazines and furans than did microwaving. "The contrasts in the flavor profiles of microwaved and thermally heated foods suggest that the different forms of energy used have different mechanisms for forming these compounds," Shibamoto says.