amazingarticlelist.com amazingarticlelist.com
   Index Page :> About Us :> Security & Privacy :> Terms of Use :> Add Your Link :> Add Article
Search:   
Multiple links exchange
 

Education & Learning

Companies & Business

News & Media

Teens & Kids

Research & Science

Tour & Travel

Games & Play

Recreation

Finance & Banking

Medical Care

Drink & Food

Lifestyle & Fashion

Culture & Art

Self Help

Property & Agents

Sports

Shopping & Auction

Vehicles & Automotive

Society & Communities

Employment & Careers

Policies & Law

Computers & Software

Health & Therapy

Home Family & Garden


 

Index Page –› Drink & Food –› Cooking & Dressing
 

What Happens When You Cook Eggs

 
Author: Cindy Ng

When you heat a whole egg, its protein molecules behave exactly as they do when you whip an egg white. They unfold, form new bonds, and create a protein network, this time with molecules of water caught in the net. As the egg cooks, the protein network tightens, squeezing out moisture, and the egg becomes opaque. The longer you cook the egg, the tighter the network will be. If you cook the egg too long, the protein network will contract strongly enough to force out all the moisture. That is why overcooked egg custards run and why overcooked eggs are rubbery.

If you mix eggs with milk or water before you cook them, the molecules of liquid will surround and separate the egg's protein molecules so that it takes more energy (higher heat) to make the protein molecules coagulate. Scrambled eggs made with milk are softer than plain scrambled eggs cooked at the same temperature.

When you boil an egg in its shell, the air inside expands and begins to escape through the shell as tiny bubbles. Sometimes, however, the force of the air is enough to crack the shell. Since there's no way for you to tell in advance whether any particular egg is strong enough to resist the pressure of the bubbling air, the best solution is to create a safety vent by sticking a pin through the broad end of the egg before you start to boil it. Or you can slow the rate at which the air inside the shell expands by starting the egg in cold water and letting it warm up naturally as the water warms rather than plunging it cold into boiling waterwhich makes the air expand so quickly that the shell is virtually certain to crack.

As the egg heats, a little bit of the protein in its white will decompose, releasing sulfur that links up with hydrogen in the egg, forming hydrogen sulfide, the gas that gives rotten eggs their distinctive smell. The hydrogen sulfide collects near the coolest part of the eggthe yolk. The yolk contains iron, which now displaces the hydrogen in the hydrogen sulfide to form a green iron-sulfide ring around the hard-cooked yolk.

Author Bio:

Cindy Ng

Cindy is the host of AsianOnlineRecipes.com, a Free Asian Recipes website dedicated to all things on Asian Cooking and Culinary Guide.

You can search for this article using: cooking recipes, chinese cooking, solar cooking, cooking light recipes, microwave cooking
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Why Chocolate for Valentine's Day?
 
Broccoli Souffl And Dilled Yellow Squash
 
Coffee - Is It The Most Popular Beverage Of All Time?
 
Why Eating Fish Prevents Cancer!
 
Making the Perfect Brisket
 
Wine Clubs - A Convenient Way to Know Wine
 
A Guide to Wine and Glass Racks
 
Is Coffee Good For You?
 
Dutch Oven Mountain Man Hash
 
Eating Healthy On The Run
 
 
 
Index Page :> Security & Privacy :> Terms of Use
© 2008 www.amazingarticlelist.com All Rights Reserved.