Heavy cream doesn’t melt when heated, it actually thickens. But if you turn heavy cream into butter, the whey separates from it and you’re left with a solid that’s mostly fat, but then if you heat that solid, it turns into a liquid that is THINNER than heavy cream.
I don’t understand how that’s possible.
In: Chemistry
Cream is an emulsion of fat in aqueous (watery) stuff. The aqueous stuff is whey, and yeah if you get rid of it all you are left with the milk fat which is a solid at room temperature.
Milk fat is a liquid at cooking temperatures. The reason it has lower viscosity than the cream is (1) I don’t think it actually does have lower viscosity, but (2) even if it does viscosity of emulsions is complicated, and yeah they can sometimes have a high viscosity.
The cream “thickening” is from you evaporating off the water which leaves more fat in the emulsion. Eventually it’ll “break” and the fat will separate on a top layer.
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