eli5: Why does cooking/warming up food make sound?

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eli5: Why does cooking/warming up food make sound?

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4 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

A lot of sounds you hear from reheating or cooking food is gases/water vapor escaping the food by being heated and turning into steam

Anonymous 0 Comments

Most of the sound is the sound of water escaping from the food – we can heat up fats and oils to very high temperatures before they start to smoke, but water will turn to steam at 100C/212F; it can’t get any hotter without vaporizing. So when water in the food hits the oil in a pan (which can be 300-400 degrees), it instantly reacts and turns into steam – this interaction gives us the sizzling sound that makes us all feel hungry.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Most things we consider food (meats, vegetables, etc.) contain a lot of water, because most things we consider food were once alive, and all living things need water to survive. The water in food isn’t generally stored in a big central balloon or anything like that, it’s generally distributed evenly throughout that food, like in between cells and stuff. However, regardless of how it’s stored, when water is heated to 212F/100C, it turns into water vapor. Water vapor is much less dense than water, therefore that water expands dramatically inside the food. The food can’t expand enough to contain all of that water vapor, so instead the water vapor basically explodes out of the food and is ejected rapidly. These tiny explosions happen hundreds or thousands of times per second, and each one makes a small sound. Put all those small sounds together, and you get a sizzle.

This is why food releases steam, which is why if you put a lid on whatever you’re cooking, a bunch of steam will collect under the lid. All that steam used to be water inside of whatever you’re cooking. You boiled that water by cooking the food.

Anonymous 0 Comments

because the pieces of food are screaming because of heating.
because of that we should not heat them and we have to eat them raw.