A collection of guides, reflections, and resources on Gastronomy and Life in Spain.

Honest Flavor.                        How This UK Startup Is Banking on Transparency in the MSG Wars

Honest Flavor. How This UK Startup Is Banking on Transparency in the MSG Wars

Discover how Honest Umami is disrupting the food industry by marketing MSG honestly instead of hiding it behind "natural flavoring" euphemisms. A case study in transparency.

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The Microbiology of Safe Fermentation: How to Harness Good Microbes and Avoid Hidden Risks

The Microbiology of Safe Fermentation: How to Harness Good Microbes and Avoid Hidden Risks

Fermentation is often seen as an ancient, “natural” way to preserve food, but that does not mean every ferment is automatically safe. Safe fermentation is applied microbiology: beneficial bacteria and yeasts must be given the right conditions to dominate, while pathogens are pushed out of their comfort zone. This article explains why properly made fermented foods are usually safer than the raw ingredients, and how regulatory concepts like GRAS and QPS define which microbes are considered safe for use in food. It compares wild ferments (like sourdough, kombucha, kefir, and kimchi) with defined starter cultures so you understand the trade-offs between flavor, tradition, and safety. You will learn the three big control levers, pH, salt and water activity, and temperature, and how they work together to keep Salmonella, Listeria, Clostridium botulinum, and other hazards in check. Finally, you get a practical checklist for safe home fermentation and clear advice for people who need to be extra cautious, including pregnant, immunocompromised, or histamine-sensitive readers.

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Kombucha Under the Microscope: The Secret Ecosystem In Your Jar

Kombucha Under the Microscope: The Secret Ecosystem In Your Jar

That rubbery disc floating in your kombucha jar is not a mistake or a film to be removed. It is a highly organized biological community thousands of years old. It is a microbial city where bacteria and yeast coexist, cooperate, and create one of the most complex fermented beverages known to humanity.

This community is called a SCOBY, which stands for Symbiotic Culture of Bacteria and Yeast. Despite its intimidating acronym, a SCOBY is simply a biofilm where microorganisms have organized themselves into a structured matrix. Understanding what lives in your kombucha jar requires understanding the remarkable organisms that call it home.

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The Magic of Miso: Ancient Fermentation Meets Modern Science

The Magic of Miso: Ancient Fermentation Meets Modern Science

In Japanese cuisine, miso is often described as liquid gold. A spoonful contains the concentrated complexity of flavors, aromas, and health benefits that result from years of microbial fermentation. Yet what makes miso truly remarkable is not poetry but biochemistry.

Miso represents one of humanity's oldest and most sophisticated fermentation processes. It demonstrates how microorganisms, salt, time, and human knowledge combine to transform simple soybeans into a food that improves nutrition, creates addictive umami flavors, and supports health.

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The Perfect Birthday I Didn't Plan: Four Days, One Celebration, and the Gift of Being Exactly Where I Am

The Perfect Birthday I Didn't Plan: Four Days, One Celebration, and the Gift of Being Exactly Where I Am

Sometimes the universe conspires in your favor in ways you could never orchestrate. My birthday this year didn't just fall on a day…it fell on the eve of San Sebastián's biggest celebration, the Tamborrada, gifting me a four-day weekend and a cascade of moments that reminded me exactly why I'm here.

I spent it wandering alone through morning streets, treating myself to an omakase dinner at Kai Sushi, sipping a mezcal martini at the legendary Dry Bar in Hotel Cristina (where staff surprised me with champagne and cake), meeting friends for craft beer at Baga Biga Faktoria, and walking home along the quiet Urumea River. When I arrived, a gift from friends back home waited on my doorstep, tangible proof that love travels across oceans.

This is the story of celebrating a birthday abroad: grateful and homesick, solo and surrounded, honoring both the life I chose and the people I miss. Because pursuing a master's degree in a foreign country means learning to hold contradictions, and finding beauty in both.

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Understanding Your Gut Microbiome: The 100 Trillion Microbes That Rule Your Health

Understanding Your Gut Microbiome: The 100 Trillion Microbes That Rule Your Health

You are never truly alone. Right now, as you read this, approximately 38 trillion microorganisms live inside your body. Most reside in your colon, creating a complex ecosystem more diverse than any rainforest and more influential to your health than you might imagine.

This ecosystem is your microbiome, and it is perhaps the single most important factor in determining your health status, immune function, mental state, and risk for chronic disease. Yet for most of human history, we did not know it existed. Modern science has only begun to appreciate its significance.

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How a Solo Birthday Omakase at Kai Sushi Became My Most Meaningful Celebration Yet

How a Solo Birthday Omakase at Kai Sushi Became My Most Meaningful Celebration Yet

The best birthday gift I've ever given myself came served on a wooden counter, one deliberate piece at a time, in a small sushi bar in San Sebastián's Centro neighborhood. No fanfare. No crowd. Just me, a master chef, and the quiet celebration of choosing myself.

When my birthday arrived this year, I faced a question many of us encounter while living abroad: Do I wait for the "perfect" celebration, or do I honor myself exactly as I am, right now? I chose myself. And in doing so, I discovered that solo dining at Kai Sushi wasn't just dinner—it was an omakase experience in trust, presence, and radical self-love. Here's what happened when I sat at that sushi counter alone, surrendered to the chef's expertise, and learned that the most profound celebrations don't require an audience.

Celebrating my birthday alone with an omakase tasting menu at Kai Sushi in San Sebastián taught me that solo dining isn't lonely, it's radical self-care. A personal journey through Japanese-Basque fusion, mindful eating, and the transformative power of choosing yourself. Plus practical tips for your own solo dining experience.

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The Science Behind Bacterial Growth: Why a Single Cell Becomes a Colony

The Science Behind Bacterial Growth: Why a Single Cell Becomes a Colony

One bacterial cell does not seem dangerous. One cell of Escherichia coli is invisible to the naked eye, weighs less than a picogram, and seems utterly insignificant in the vastness of food or human body.

Yet that single cell is a sophisticated biological entity with the potential to become a problem rapidly. Understanding bacterial growth is understanding one of the most important principles in food safety, fermentation control, and disease prevention.

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Designing Delicious: Why Sensory Science Is the Most Underrated Food Technology

Designing Delicious: Why Sensory Science Is the Most Underrated Food Technology

Sensory science turns “cool ideas” into food people love. Here’s how GOe approaches sensory evaluation, chef panels, and consumer insight to design delicious outcomes.

Sensory analysis, GOe Tech Center, consumer science, chef panels, product development, flavor perception, San Sebastián

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Fermentation Is Technology: How GOe Turns Microbes Into Flavor, Sustainability, and New Possibilities

Fermentation Is Technology: How GOe Turns Microbes Into Flavor, Sustainability, and New Possibilities

Fermentation isn’t a trend, it’s a technology. GOe is using microorganisms, labs, and culinary creativity to design foods that are delicious, healthy, and sustainable.
Fermentation, GOe Tech Center, microbiology, flavor innovation, sustainable food, gastronomy technology, San Sebastián

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GOe in San Sebastián: When a Building Becomes a Food Innovation Ecosystem

GOe in San Sebastián: When a Building Becomes a Food Innovation Ecosystem

San Sebastián just gained a new kind of landmark: GOe, Gastronomy Open Ecosystem. It’s not only a building; it’s an ecosystem that connects education, research, entrepreneurship, and public engagement to build a more delicious (and more sustainable) future. Here’s what GOe is, why it matters, and what I’m learning from being in this environment.
#GOe #SanSebastian #FoodInnovation #Gastronomy #FoodTech #SensoryScience #Fermentation

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Umami: The Fifth Taste That's Reshaping Our Understanding of Flavor, Culture, and Health

Umami: The Fifth Taste That's Reshaping Our Understanding of Flavor, Culture, and Health

Explore umami from science to culture. Discover how the fifth taste shapes flavor, challenges xenophobia, drives markets, and revolutionizes plant-based cuisine.






- "umami taste receptors T1R1 T1R3" - "MSG safety scientific consensus" - "Chinese Restaurant Syndrome myth debunked" - "umami synergy glutamate inosinate" - "plant-based umami sources" - "umami salt reduction cardiovascular health" - "fermentation umami development" - "umami market growth 2025" - "Kikunae Ikeda umami discovery" - "umami Mediterranean diet" - "Basque cuisine umami" - "xenophobia MSG Asian restaurants" - "umami food waste sustainability"

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Dried Shiitake Mushrooms: The Plant-Based Secret Weapon That Outperforms Meat

Dried Shiitake Mushrooms: The Plant-Based Secret Weapon That Outperforms Meat

A single dried shiitake mushroom contains more free glutamate than an entire plate of pasta with meat sauce. This fact alone explains why plant-based chefs have become obsessed with mushroom-based ingredients, why food companies are investing heavily in mushroom fermentation technology, and why dried shiitakes command premium prices in international markets.

The numbers are striking. Fresh shiitake mushrooms contain approximately 70 milligrams of free glutamate per 100 grams. Dried shiitakes, after the water removal process concentrates all their compounds, contain approximately 1,060 milligrams per 100 grams of free glutamate. That is a fifteen-fold concentration of one of nature's most savory molecules, making dried shiitakes one of the most umami-rich foods on the planet, rivaled only by aged Parmesan cheese at 1,680 milligrams per 100 grams and concentrated miso pastes.

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How Your Kitchen Can Become a Laboratory with Fermentation

How Your Kitchen Can Become a Laboratory with Fermentation

Most people consume fermented foods every single day without understanding the elegant biochemistry happening at a microscopic level. That tangy yogurt sitting in your fridge, the complex flavors in your miso paste, the effervescent kombucha you sip in the afternoon, all the result of microorganisms following fundamental biochemical principles that have remained unchanged for billions of years.

Fermentation is not new. Humans have been fermenting foods for over 10,000 years, long before we understood microbiology or genetics. Yet only recently have scientists begun to fully appreciate the genius of what traditional cultures understood intuitively: fermentation is transformation through microbial metabolism.

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Parmesan, Tomatoes, and Anchovies: How Italian Cooking Accidentally Perfected Umami

Parmesan, Tomatoes, and Anchovies: How Italian Cooking Accidentally Perfected Umami

Italian cuisine stands as one of humanity's most sophisticated food traditions, celebrated worldwide for its elegance, simplicity, and depth of flavor. What most Italian cooks, and most Italian food enthusiasts, do not realize is that this tradition developed into something very close to umami perfection through centuries of culinary experimentation, entirely independent of scientific understanding of umami as a taste category or knowledge of glutamate as a chemical compound.

The evidence appears immediately when examining umami content of canonical Italian ingredients. Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese contains approximately 1,680 milligrams of free glutamate per 100 grams, making it one of the most umami-dense foods on Earth. Ripe tomatoes contribute 246 milligrams per 100 grams, with sun-dried tomatoes concentrating this to 650 to 1,140 milligrams. Aged balsamic vinegar contains significant free glutamate from the fermentation process. Cured anchovies deliver both glutamate and inosinate, creating synergistic umami amplification.

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How a Single Letter in 1968 Traumatized Asian Restaurants for 50 Years

How a Single Letter in 1968 Traumatized Asian Restaurants for 50 Years

On a spring evening in 1968, Dr. Robert Ho Man Kwok sat down after dining at a Chinese restaurant and experienced some unusual sensations. He felt numbness, weakness, heart palpitations. In a letter to the New England Journal of Medicine, he speculated about potential causes: perhaps the soy sauce, perhaps the cooking wine, perhaps the monosodium glutamate. That single letter, published in a prestigious medical journal, would trigger five decades of fear, discriminatory marketing, and economic harm targeting Asian restaurateurs and Asian cuisines across the Western world.

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MSG Got Rehabilitated. Now What?

MSG Got Rehabilitated. Now What?

For nearly sixty years, MSG carried a scarlet letter. Food packages proudly announced "No MSG Added" as though they were advertising a health feature comparable to reduced sodium or no artificial preservatives. Asian restaurants endured economic discrimination. Families worried about neurological harm that scientific evidence consistently refuted. Then, in a series of relatively recent cultural shifts, MSG began rehabilitation. Chefs openly embraced it. Companies created campaigns mocking the stigma. A dictionary entry was revised. But what does this rehabilitation actually mean, and where does it leave us?

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Why Your Mother's Milk Was Umami, and What That Tells Us About Flavor

Why Your Mother's Milk Was Umami, and What That Tells Us About Flavor

The first taste any human experiences is not sweet, not savory in the way we typically think of umami, yet it delivers one of nature's most perfect examples of the fifth taste in its purest form. Breast milk contains glutamate at concentrations roughly 40 times higher than what appears in maternal blood, a deliberate biological choice that reveals something profound about human taste perception and nutritional needs.

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What Is Gastronomy? Food, Culture, and Why It Matters  (to Me)

What Is Gastronomy? Food, Culture, and Why It Matters (to Me)

Gastronomy isn’t just cooking. It’s food in context: culture, sustainability, science, justice, and story. Here’s what it is, why it matters, and why I’m making it my life’s work.


gastronomy, what is gastronomy, food culture, food justice, gastronomy meaning, food sustainability, Basque food culture, gastronomy student

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