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Sunday 1 July 2012

10 IMPRESSIVE MICROSCOPIC IMAGES OF FOOD


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Impressive Microscopic Photos of Food
By
Green Buzz, 29 June 2012.

Caren Alpert spent eighteen years as a photo editor as well as food photographer before transforming her artist’s eye to the things we see each day yet never look closely at: What we eat.

1. Red Liquorice

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Can you recognize this volcano opening? It’s red liquorice, and is made from sugar, fruit flavouring, and gelatine. [Liquorice is a confectionery flavoured with the extract of the roots of the liquorice plant.] Though red liquorice doesn’t generally contain liquorice extract, its cousin, black liquorice does, and you may also use liquorice extract for skin treatments and hangover helpers.

2. Chocolate Cake

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In your hand, chocolate cake is moist, sweet, and indisputably delicious. But below a microscope, it’s a blocky, geometric collection of cocoa, sugar, flour, and other ingredients.

3. Banana Skin

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Because you throw banana peels in the compost the moment you’re done eating, you might not realize how textured and mountainous the skin can be.

4. Cauliflower

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Cauliflower is part of the cruciferous group of vegetables - together with broccoli, cabbage, and kale - but it hasn’t earned exactly the same popularity. And that’s a pity, simply because properly-cooked cauliflower isn’t the mushy, cheese-covered side dish of your youth: It’s a tasty canvas for roasting, grilling, blending for soups, and adding other flavours from curry to chestnuts. (It’s also packed with vitamin C, antioxidants, and fibre.)

5. Fortune Cookie

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This isn’t a dark river slicing through an arid desert - it’s a cracked fortune cookie, made from flour, sugar, butter, and extracts, then rolled, cut, and shaped into a sweet folded triangle.

6. Red Onion

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Cooks realize that the real beauty of an red onion is its versatility: The layered veggies put in a tasty depth to salads, soups, stews, casseroles, and many other meals.

7. Pineapple Leaf

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Nice and delicious pineapples are at home on your dish alone because they are adding a touch of flavour to meats and salads, the leaves however have even more practical use. They could be turned into fibres that ethical designers use instead of carbon-heavy cotton or synthetics.

8. Radish

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A springtime plants, radishes come in nearly all the colours of the rainbow - red, pink, white, purple - and add a zesty tang to lighten up fresh salads and roasted side dishes (you can also add the greens to butter to spread the taste around).

9. Cake Sprinkles

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Once magnified, cake sprinkles look just as colourful as the healthier meals on this list - however the hard texture isn’t quite as attractive as geometric as veggies and fruit skins.

10. Star Anise

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Star anise is among the several foods on this list that’s as extraordinary from afar as it is when magnified: A tasty Chinese spice which is easily recognized by its unique form. Though you may use it in cooking, additionally it is well-known for its medical purposes: fans like its anti-fungal and antibacterial properties, and use it for fighting coughs (it’s also a main ingredient in Tamiflu).


[Source: Green Buzz. Edited. Top image added.]


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