Showing posts with label context. Show all posts
Showing posts with label context. Show all posts

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Time's Terpenoids Need Chem Context

The latest issue of Time discussed drought impact on food flavoring molecules: Health & Science section, p. 26. Seeing words like sucrose, sulfur, and capsaicin in a major magazine perked up my chem "spider sense," but I balked at the description under "bitter" vegetables like dill, fennel, or carrots. The exact passage reads:
"Chock-full of terpenoids, or aromatic compounds, that become especially concentrated during drought conditions"
OK, Time, what did you mean, exactly? Context clues are key - the author wants the word "aromatic" to describe sense impact, or how these compounds taste and smell. Of course, when I think "aromatic compounds," I imagine cyclic molecules with lots of pi electrons, stabilized through conjugation.


Can't we both be right? Of course! Certain compounds fit both criteria - they have both an aromatic ring and also smell good. Then, of course, there's terpenoids that don't fit either rule. Most play to the middle: they're odiferous, but would still make Huckel cry himself to sleep.

Either way, a little context goes a long way to helping people understand the wide array of flavor compounds in their food...without causing chemistry consternation.

Update (8/9/12) - Fixed image, deleted THC, added thymol as a more representative volatile terpenoid