The networks of ingredient combinations as culinary fingerprints of world cuisines
Claudio Caprioli, Saumitra Kulkarni, Federico Battiston, Iacopo Iacopini, Andrea Santoro, Vito Latora

TL;DR
This study uses network analysis of ingredient combinations from global cuisines to identify distinctive culinary patterns, enabling accurate cuisine classification and revealing cultural relationships through data-driven methods.
Contribution
It introduces a network-based approach to characterize and compare world cuisines, uncovering culinary fingerprints and enabling high-accuracy machine learning classification.
Findings
Cuisines differ in ingredient type usage and structural organization.
Network patterns serve as distinctive culinary fingerprints.
Machine learning accurately classifies cuisines from recipe subsets.
Abstract
Investigating how different ingredients are combined in popular dishes is crucial to uncover the principles behind food preferences. Here, we use data from public food repositories and network analysis to characterize and compare worldwide cuisines. Ingredients are first grouped into broader types, and each cuisine is then represented as a network in which nodes correspond to ingredient types and weighted links describe how frequently pairs of types co-occur in recipes. Cuisines differ not only in the popularity of ingredient types and range of recipe sizes, but also in the structural organization of ingredient-type combinations. By analyzing these networks, we uncover distinctive patterns of type associations that serve as culinary fingerprints. For example, European cuisines typically distribute ingredients across different types, whereas certain Asian and South American traditions…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCulinary Culture and Tourism
