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Suicide of Michelin-starred chef Homaro Cantu, who blended science and cooking

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Homaro Cantu poses at his restaurant Moto in Chicago in 2013. Photo: AP

Chef Homaro Cantu, who artfully blended science and fine dining at his Michelin-starred Chicago restaurant, has committed suicide.

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The 38-year-old Cantu, one of Chicago’s most renowned chefs, turned cooking into alchemy through his brand of molecular gastronomy at Moto, the restaurant he led in the city’s West Loop neighborhood.

His death was ruled a suicide by the Cook County medical examiner’s office, which said Wednesday that Cantu had hanged himself. Cantu’s body was found Tuesday in a building on the northwest side where he had planned to open a brewery by this summer.

His customers dined on edible menus, carbonated fruit and a fish preparation that cooked in a tabletop polymer box, among other foods.

His kitchen featured a centrifuge and a hand-held ion particle gun. His menus offered up items with intriguing titles such as “surf and turf with mc escher” and “after Christmas sale on Christmas trees.” And he dreamed up fantastical propositions for everything from alleviating hunger with air-dropped edible leaflets to delivering food to astronauts on Mars.

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Describing himself as a scientist at heart, Cantu was untroubled by questions about whether his creations were more science project or true fine cuisine.

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