When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Poached egg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poached_egg

    To prevent this, the egg can be strained before cooking to remove the thinner component of the egg white. [2] A small amount of vinegar may also be added to the water, as its acidic qualities accelerate poaching. [3] Stirring the water vigorously to create a vortex may also reduce dispersion. [4] The age of the eggs affects the cooking process.

  3. Please Don't Put These 39 Foods In The Freezer - AOL

    www.aol.com/please-dont-put-39-foods-162100206.html

    Food, Milk, Lactose, Raw milk, Dairy, Soy milk, Grain milk, Drink, Rice milk, Almond milk, Whole Eggs The gooey inside of raw whole eggs will expand when frozen, causing a cracked and leaky mess ...

  4. Emulsion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emulsion

    Homogenized milk – an emulsion of milk fat in water, with milk proteins as the emulsifier; Vinaigrette – an emulsion of vegetable oil in vinegar, if this is prepared using only oil and vinegar (i.e., without an emulsifier), an unstable emulsion results; Water-in-oil emulsions are less common in food, but still exist:

  5. Watch what happens when you crack an egg into liquid nitrogen

    www.aol.com/news/2015-10-13-watch-what-happens...

    The video they posted shows what happens when you dip eggs in liquid nitrogen, and how their content reacts when you crack one inside of the fluid. In the first part of the video, three eggs are ...

  6. Boiled egg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boiled_egg

    Keeping the cooked eggs soaked in water helps keep the membrane under the shell moist for easy peeling. Peeling the egg under cold running water is an effective method of removing the shell. Starting the cooking in hot water also makes the egg easier to peel. [22] It is often claimed that steaming eggs in a pressure cooker makes them easier to ...

  7. What happens when you crack an egg underwater? - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2016-04-13-what-happens-when...

    Instead, the surrounding water assumes the role of the eggshell, exerting enough inward pressure on the egg (2.8 times atmospheric pressure, to be exact) to keep it intact.

  8. Curdling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curdling

    In hot preparations emulsified with eggs like hollandaise and custard, curdling is the undesirable result of overheating the sauce. Sauces which contain starch curdle with more difficulty. In cold sauces like mayonnaise as well as in hot sauces, too large a ratio of fat to egg may also cause curdling.

  9. Caesar salad is traditionally made with raw egg yolk. Try ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/caesar-salad-traditionally...

    “Salmonella can contaminate both the exterior of the egg shell from chicken fecal matter and the interior of the egg as the egg develops,” he explains. Cooking eggs to an internal temperature ...