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  • Prognosticating what chemistry can bring to our plates

    October 14, 2024 | Appeared In Volume 102, Issue 32

Chemistry and food do not go together in most people’s minds, but chemistry has always been food’s natural companion. Food supplies the energy and nutrients we need to make our bodies’ biochemistry run, and chemical innovations continue to transform our food supply—from fertilizing crops to keeping food from spoiling on store shelves.

In this issue, C&EN wanted to dig into how science is changing sustenance. With that in mind, we’re serving up stories on nutritional advances for ultraprocessed foods, the science of bringing flavor to lab-grown meat, and companies using bioreactors to make food production more sustainable. We also look at ecofriendly advances in food packaging and how policymakers are grappling with advances in genetically modified food, and we chat with an ethnobotanist about agriculture and food biochemistry.

Bon appétit!

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Contributors

Editorial leads: Bethany Halford and Laura Howes
Project manager: Raadhia Patwary
Writers: Carrie Arnold, Craig Bettenhausen, Matt Blois, Laurel Oldach, Fionna Samuels, and Alex Scott
Creative director: Robert Bryson
Lead Art director: William A. Ludwig
Art director: Yang H. Ku
UI/UX director: Kay Youn
Web producers: Jennifer Muller and Seamus Murphy
Copyeditors: Sabrina J. Ashwell and Bran Vickers
Production editors: Jonathan Forney, Kim Habicht, David Padgham, Raadhia Patwary, Sydney Smith, and Marsha-Ann Watson
Engagement editors: Liam Conlon, Leeann Kirchner, and Marianna Limas

Food Science

The future of food

Prognosticating what chemistry can bring to our plates

October 13, 2024 | A version of this story appeared in Volume 102, Issue 32
Medely of food?

Credit: TK

 

Chemistry and food do not go together in most people’s minds, but chemistry has always been food’s natural companion. Food supplies the energy and nutrients we need to make our bodies’ biochemistry run, and chemical innovations continue to transform our food supply—from fertilizing crops to keeping food from spoiling on store shelves.

In this issue, C&EN wanted to dig into how science is changing sustenance. With that in mind, we’re serving up stories on nutritional advances for ultraprocessed foods, the science of bringing flavor to lab-grown meat, and companies using bioreactors to make food production more sustainable. We also look at ecofriendly advances in food packaging and how policymakers are grappling with advances in genetically modified food, and we chat with an ethnobotanist about agriculture and food biochemistry.

Bon appétit!

Contributors

Editorial leads: Bethany Halford and Laura Howes

Project manager: Raadhia Patwary

Writers: Carrie Arnold, Craig Bettenhausen, Matt Blois, Laurel Oldach, Fionna Samuels, and Alex Scott

Creative director: Robert Bryson

Lead art director: William A. Ludwig

Art director: Yang H. Ku

UI/UX director: Kay Youn

Web producers: Jennifer Muller and Seamus Murphy

Copyeditors: Sabrina J. Ashwell and Bran Vickers

Production editors: Jonathan Forney, Kim Habicht, David Padgham, Raadhia Patwary, Sydney Smith, and Marsha-Ann Watson

Engagement editors: Liam Conlon, Leeann Kirchner, and Marianna Limas

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