![]() ![]() ![]() If you are cooking seeds like rice or beans, it takes a certain amount of time for the seeds to absorb water and become soft enough to eat, and this happens faster if the temperature is high. Somewhere in between you get the interior done properly, with the exterior just a little browned and crispy. You could turn it up to 500 and hope the inside heats up faster, but by the time the inside is ready, the meat on the outside gets way too hot and maybe even starts to blacken. If you want an internal temperature of 150 to kill bacteria or parasites, you could imagine cooking for 12 hours until the whole piece reaches that temp, but then you lose a lot of moisture. In general when dry-cooking meat you often want the inside to reach a certain temperature, without having the outside dry out too much. Then I can cook it for two minutes at a very high temperature to brown the surface without raising the overall temperature, so the inside stays rare. If I have a tough piece of meat, I might cook it for 12 hours at a low temperature and high moisture to tenderize it (and maybe in a braising liquid to add flavor). If gas production peaks before the temperature is high enough, the bubbles can collapse if the temperature rises too fast, the dough will set too early. The dough should set just as the bubbles are at their largest size for fluffy bread. It continues to produce gas as the heat begins to set the dough. These physical and chemical (even biological) processes require a certain optimal range of temperature (and humidity) and take a certain amount of time to be completed.įor example, when you bake bread, the yeast in the dough remains alive until the temperature rises high enough to kill it. Many "things" happen in cooking a particular dish. ![]()
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