What does pre-heating the oven do to the cooking process?

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Does it matter what the temperature of the food that will be cooked from (frozen or refrigerated)?

In: Physics

2 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Heat transfers based on the difference of temperature between the two objects.

When cooking, you want to put food in, and pull it out when it reaches another specific temperature. If you have the oven at a specific temperature, you can get a pretty good measure of how much time it will take to reach the target temperature.

If instead you put your food in a cold oven, you now need to consider how quickly your oven heats up. While it’s still cool, it’s not transferring heat as quickly. Moreover, since every oven is different, even if you managed to find a time that worked for your oven, you would not necessarily be able to transfer this knowledge to another oven, since it heats up at a different rate.

In addition, there are some recipes that are very carefully developed because you may want different parts of the final food at different temperatures. For instance, Beef Wellington has a puff pastry layer that finishes at a different temperature than the beef it wraps around. The amount of time for cooking also matters with this, since time is what allows heat to penetrate. Changing the temperature also changes the time.

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