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Free NASA iPad book on space food

Maggie Koerth-Baker at 10:13 am Tue, Aug 14, 2012

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There are some topics that inspire an almost universal fascination—weird animal penises, for instance ... or, more SFW-ly, space food. The question, "what do people eat in space?", quickly leads down a rabbit hole of strange preparation machines, esoteric packaging, and futuristic gels. Decades after we gave up on a 1950s idea of what the 21st century would be like, space food remains this sort of weird holdover, combining modern science with the physical/design sensibilities of a different time.

And there's more to it than just freeze-drying some Neapolitan ice cream. Space menus are highly organized things—a function of limited storage space and long missions to the space station. They're also deeply researched. There's no entree, not even a snack, that reaches the space station without a very good reason for it being there. Caloric intake, nutrient content, every aspect has been thoroughly micromanaged.

At Download the Universe, Veronique Greenwood reviews Space Nutrition, a new NASA ebook for iPad that's available for free download online. The book is written with children in mind, but Greenwood says there's enough detail and behind-the-scenes perspective that adults can get something out of it, as well. The formatting is occasionally frustrating (it only works in portrait mode), but for a free book, it's hard to complain too much.

.. the book's primary charm is in the photographs and asides that you can’t find in a Wikipedia article on the subject. One photogallery is full of snapshots taken by excited Nutritional Biochemistry Lab members as they drive to Kennedy Space Center to pick up astronaut blood samples from the ISS, which they use to determine the effects of space flight on nutrient absorption, bones, and muscles. The shots of the Experiment Payload truck that retrieves the samples and of the little blue NASA duffel bags they are carried home in give the process of space research a refreshing physicality.

And spaceflight seen from a food scientist's point of view is endearingly kooky. Crumbs are a big no-no for space foods—they fly around and clog the instruments. Tortillas that last almost a year, on the other hand, are a very exciting development, the authors write, because you would need three hands to make a traditional sandwich with two slices of bread and a slice of baloney in space. The book's history of manned spaceflight missions reads like no other you'll find. Gemini: Shrimp cocktail, chicken and vegetables, pudding, applesauce. Apollo: bread slices, cheddar cheese spread, frankfurters, fruit juice. Skylab: steak, vanilla ice cream.

Read the rest of the review at Download the Universe

Maggie Koerth-Baker is the science editor at BoingBoing.net. She writes a monthly column for The New York Times Magazine and is the author of Before the Lights Go Out, a book about electricity, infrastructure, and the future of energy. You can find Maggie on Twitter and Facebook.

Maggie goes places and talks to people. Find out where she'll be speaking next.

MORE:  books • ebooks • Food • NASA • Reviews • Science • Space

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  • http://profiles.google.com/stephen.schenck Stephen Schenck

    I would have hoped that publications from a government agency would be in an open, or at least cross-platform format. 

    • Conan Librarian

      I have learned never to hope for anything. Especially not something positive, and especially not from a government/corporate agency.

  • PlutoniumX

    Vacuum packed space weed, top right corner!  

  • corollax

    …huh.

    http://satwcomic.com/the-collection

    http://satwcomic.com/brand-new-equipment

    Maggie, by any chance, are you Icelandic?

    • http://maggiekb.com/ Maggie Koerth-Baker

      Not remotely. But maybe the Internet is. 

      BTW: Those comics are hilarious. 

  • mrtut

    Is this book available for children that don’t own iPads?

    If not, is it legal to liberate the content of this book so it can be available for the masses?

    • Conan Librarian

      When liberating prisoners, you don’t ask if their captor considers their freeing illegal. 

    • http://twitter.com/strugglngwriter strugglngwriter

      It’s available elsewhere, but not for free.
      http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/space-nutrition-scott-m-smith/1111795501 

  • akb

    Well at least the newsletter that it mentions isn’t in Comic Sans… oh wait never mind ;-)