Reddit Reddit reviews The Science of Cooking

We found 9 Reddit comments about The Science of Cooking. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Books
Engineering & Transportation
Engineering
Chemical Engineering
The Science of Cooking
Springer
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9 Reddit comments about The Science of Cooking:

u/un_internaute · 3 pointsr/Cooking

> filling the water with thirty seconds worth of water and let that defrost the meat.

But that's not what you said. You said...

>Add a bit more water every five/ten minutes to keep the temperature safe

The issue of continual water use is literally the same in both of these scenarios because the temperature of the meat is directly related to the temperature of the water. Basically the thaw time will equal the amount water used.

I may even be wrong and your method may take longer, and use more water, because, if you're not careful, the temperature of the water and the meat will equalize too much and slow the thawing process. As the rate of thawing is faster the more dissimilar the temperature of the meat is from the temperature of the water.

http://www.amazon.com/Science-Cooking-Peter-Barham/dp/3540674667/ref=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&qid=1422315510&sr=8-4&keywords=science+of+cooking

u/londonzoo · 2 pointsr/science

Also The Science of Cooking, written by an actual food scientist.

u/[deleted] · 2 pointsr/RedPillWomen

>> cooking is an expensive and time consuming hobby

> Cooking doesn't have to be expensive. It does take some money to get yourself set up with a good spice selection and tools, but after you have the basics your costs should go down.

Beat me to it!

Also, don't think of it as a hobby. It's a valuable life/social skill and should be taken seriously.

A friend of mine recommended this book to me to demystify the physical processes at play and why you should do things a certain way. I think it would be useful if you feel you don't have a natural talent.

u/lechatcestmoi · 2 pointsr/Cooking

Well check this book out, by a guy at my uni. It helps you understand the basis for a lot of processes that we just sort of inherit from our parents without knowing why.

u/FreelanceSocialist · 1 pointr/askscience

In the same vein - The Science of Cooking by Peter Barnham.

In fact, Google Books has partial previews of both, and you can search within them:

On Food and Cooking

The Science of Cooking

u/huzoor · 1 pointr/food

The Science of Cooking. This book turned me from a nerd into a nerd who can cook.

u/PrincessYukon · 1 pointr/IWantToLearn