The chemistry of cookies - Stephanie Warren

3,620,491 views ・ 2013-11-19

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:07
In a time-lapse video, it looks like a monster coming alive.
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For a moment, it sits there innocuously.
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Then, ripples move across its surface.
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It bulges outwards, bursting with weird boils.
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It triples in volume.
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Its color darkens ominously, and its surface hardens
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into an alien topography of peaks and craters.
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Then, the kitchen timer dings.
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Your cookie is ready.
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What happened inside that oven?
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Don't let the apron deceive you!
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Bakers are mad scientists.
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When you slide the pan into the oven,
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you're setting off a series of chemical reactions
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that transform one substance, dough, into another, cookies.
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When the dough reaches 92 degrees Fahrenheit,
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the butter inside melts,
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causing the dough to start spreading out.
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Butter is an emulsion,
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or mixture of two substances
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that don't want to stay together,
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in this case, water and fat,
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along with some dairy solids that help hold them together.
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As the butter melts, its trapped water is released.
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And as the cookie gets hotter, the water expands into steam.
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It pushes against the dough from the inside,
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trying to escape through the cookie walls
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like Ridley Scott's chest-bursting alien.
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Your eggs may have been home to squirming salmonella bacteria.
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An estimated 142,000 Americans are infected this way each year.
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Though salmonella can live for weeks outside a living body
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and even survive freezing,
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136 degrees is too hot for them.
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When your dough reaches that temperature, they die off.
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You'll live to test your fate with a bite of raw dough
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you sneak from your next batch.
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At 144 degrees, changes begin in the proteins,
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which come mostly from the eggs in your dough.
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Eggs are composed of dozens of different kinds of proteins,
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each sensitive to a different temperature.
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In an egg fresh from the hen,
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these proteins look like coiled up balls of string.
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When they're exposed to heat energy,
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the protein strings unfold and get tangled up with their neighbors.
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This linked structure
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makes the runny egg nearly solid,
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giving substance to squishy dough.
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Water boils away at 212 degrees,
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so like mud baking in the sun,
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your cookie gets dried out and it stiffens.
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Cracks spread across its surface.
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The steam that was bubbling inside evaporates,
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leaving behind airy pockets that make the cookie light and flaky.
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Helping this along is your leavening agent,
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sodium bicarbonate,
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or baking soda.
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The sodium bicarbonate reacts with acids in the dough
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to create carbon dioxide gas, which makes airy pockets in your cookie.
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Now, it's nearly ready for a refreshing dunk
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in a cool glass of milk.
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One of science's tastiest reactions
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occurs at 310 degrees.
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This is the temperature for Maillard reactions.
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Maillard reactions result
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when proteins and sugars break down and rearrange themselves,
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forming ring-like structures,
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which reflect light in a way
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that gives foods like Thanksgiving turkey
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and hamburgers
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their distinctive, rich brown color.
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As this reaction occurs,
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it produces a range of flavor and aroma compounds,
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which also react with each other,
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forming even more complex tastes and smells.
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Caramelization is the last reaction
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to take place inside your cookie.
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Caramelization is what happens
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when sugar molecules break down under high heat,
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forming the sweet, nutty,
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and slightly bitter flavor compounds that define, well, caramel.
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And, in fact, if your recipe calls for a 350 degree oven,
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it'll never happen,
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since caramelization starts at 356 degrees.
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If your ideal cookie is barely browned,
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like a Northeasterner on a beach vacation,
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you could have set your oven to 310 degrees.
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If you like your cookies to have a nice tan,
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crank up the heat.
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Caramelization continues up to 390 degrees.
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And here's another trick:
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you don't need that kitchen timer;
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your nose is a sensitive scientific instrument.
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When you smell the nutty, toasty aromas
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of the Maillard reaction and caramelization,
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your cookies are ready.
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Grab your glass of milk,
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put your feet up,
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and reflect that science can be pretty sweet.
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