Morphogenesis of cheese flowers through scraping
ORAL · Invited
Abstract
The “Tête de moine” Swiss cheese is generally served by scraping its surface of a cylindrical loaf with a sharp tool. This produces thin sheets of cheese that are strongly wrinkled at the edge, resembling crumpled flowers and enhancing the tasting experience. In this work we unveil the physical mechanisms at play in this scraping-induced morphogenesis. We measure the deformation of the cheese during scraping and show that plastic deformation occurs everywhere, but find a larger plastic contraction in the inner part of the flower, causing its buckling into shape. We show that it surprisingly derives from the lower friction coefficient evidenced on the cheese close to its crust. Our analysis provides the tools for a better control of chip morphogenesis through plasticity in the shaping of other delicacies, but also in metal cutting.
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Publication: We are about to submit this work to Physical Review Letters
Presenters
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Matteo Ciccotti
ESPCI Paris PSL, ESPCI Paris
Authors
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Matteo Ciccotti
ESPCI Paris PSL, ESPCI Paris
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Benoît Roman
ESPCI Paris PSL
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Jishen Zhang
ESPCI Paris PSL
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Alejandro Ibarra
ESPCI Paris PSL