Too Real: Why There’s Froth When You Boil Pasta

Froth

Every time you throw a stack of uncooked pastas into a pot of boiling water, there’s an unmistakable froth that appears. Have you ever wondered what the foamy gunk that arises in your water could be? Answer: it’s thanks to a chemical combination of the boiling water and the pasta you threw in. Oh, science!

Turns out that since pasta is made from flour, water and sometimes eggs, the starch and protein are dried and stored into the noodles. When you throw them into boiling water, a heated and moist environment, the starch continues to absorb more and more water until it bursts. The result is starch molecules being expelled into the water, creating the froth you see.

The starch also causes the pastas to stick together in the middle of the cooking process, so you have to stir occasionally to prevent one giant lump from forming. After your pasta has finished boiling, the water is saturated with starch. So if you add a bit of that water to your sauce, it will allow the sauce to stick better to your pasta.

The more you know.

H/T Today I Found Out

More content

Eating OutProducts
Prince St. Pizza Teams Up With NHL Star Jack Eichel on a Spicy Pizza Pocket
Prince St. Pizza, the famous New York-based chain known for its Sicilian-style square pies and original Neapolitan pizzas, has teamed up with the 2023 Stanley…
,
Products
Carbone’s New Sauce Combines Cacio e Pepe And Alfredo In One Jar
Cacio e pepe is one of those classics that sounds simple but demands precision. It survives on good ingredients and confident execution. When it hits…
,
Eating InInnovation
Instacart Confirms A.I. Pricing Tests That Charge Shoppers Different Amounts
As part of a larger project with the nonprofit organization More Perfect Union, a Consumer Reports and Groundwork Collaborative investigation has found that Instacart is…
,
Burger
We Deliver!

Enter your email address below and we'll deliver our top stories straight to your inbox