PDA

View Full Version : quick cooking question


rachmaninoff
Dec27-05, 02:05 PM
How do you heat cooking oil - it's flammable so it'd have to be under an inert atmosphere right? How do you set this up?

Entropy
Dec27-05, 02:28 PM
Cooking oil? Be more specific.

Jelfish
Dec27-05, 02:32 PM
huh? I think most cooking oils start to decompose before it boils (at what's called the smoking temperature). That means, it's sort of burning and you'll start to see smoke. I believe it won't catch on fire though unless you actually light it, since the hottest oil is at the bottom of the pan, where the rest of the oil keeps the oxygen away.

rachmaninoff
Dec27-05, 02:44 PM
So you can do it under atmospheric conditions. Gotcha.

rachmaninoff
Dec27-05, 03:23 PM
What do bubbles mean? Is that boiling?

rachmaninoff
Dec27-05, 03:45 PM
HELP!!! A single drop of oil is sliding down the exterior of the frying pan, towards the heat source!!! Will it explode? Am I in danger? Does insurance cover this sort of thing?

Danger
Dec27-05, 03:48 PM
Oh, relax. It'll just burn off. If you're that concerned about it, wipe it off before it gets to the flame (or element, if an electric stove). Even if the whole bloody pan catches on fire, just put a lid on it and it'll go out. DO NOT, UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES, POUR WATER ON IT!!

Evo
Dec27-05, 04:04 PM
HELP!!! A single drop of oil is sliding down the exterior of the frying pan, towards the heat source!!! Will it explode? Am I in danger? Does insurance cover this sort of thing?First time cooking with oil? :biggrin:

Stay away from deep fryers. :bugeye:

rachmaninoff
Dec27-05, 04:08 PM
Hmm, it burned out.

What does water do? It's not nearly hot enough to evolve hydrogen gas.

___
Dec27-05, 04:18 PM
"What does water do? It's not nearly hot enough to evolve hydrogen gas."


it will have some kind of big and quickly exploding bubbles, which will spray oil and water into you giving you blisters. keep the flame low i guess.

ZapperZ
Dec27-05, 04:19 PM
I don't think I want to be within a block of this one.....

Zz.

Evo
Dec27-05, 04:19 PM
thinks rach has been drinking the cooking sherry

:uhh: :wink:

Astronuc
Dec27-05, 04:44 PM
http://missvickie.com/howto/spices/oils.html

http://www.culinary-yours.com/frying_oil.html

http://www.oliveoilsource.com/cooking_olive_oil.htm

One can use a pan or skillet on an electric or gas (flame) stove.

What are you planning to cook in oil? Or are you cooking?

rachmaninoff
Dec27-05, 04:47 PM
My latkes have succeeded! Even more astonishing, I have walked away unharmed! Three cheers for chemical-resistant goggles.

edit: thanks for the links, Astro. They just might save my life next time.

Astronuc
Dec27-05, 04:58 PM
Latkes! Cool.

Evo was supposed to have made latkes the other night. :tongue2: I wonder how they turned out.

zanazzi78
Dec27-05, 05:13 PM
Here's a clip of how to deal with a chip-pan fire and what happens if you try and pour water on it.

FIRE (http://www.devfire.gov.uk/index.cfm?lev=3&page=79)

TheStatutoryApe
Dec27-05, 05:38 PM
Hmm, it burned out.

What does water do? It's not nearly hot enough to evolve hydrogen gas.
!!!!:bugeye:!!!!
How do you not know about not using water to put out an oil/chemical fire!!!

rachmaninoff
Dec27-05, 05:41 PM
Oh we were talking about fires? That clarifies things. I thought the subect was not adding water to boiling oil. Which is also a bad idea, incidentally.

TheStatutoryApe
Dec27-05, 05:49 PM
Duh.........

Pengwuino
Dec27-05, 05:50 PM
This whole city is in trouble when i start cooking...

Moonbear
Dec27-05, 07:39 PM
You guys all got me craving latkes, so I had to make them for dinner tonight too. :approve: It's much easier to shred the potato and onion with a food processor (something I only acquired last year and have never attempted latkes with; I hardly ever make them). I read a few recipes online and took a rough average of the ingredients. Yum! Just like I remember them tasting when I was a kid (the first time I ever had them was in second grade when we made them in school). I didn't have any applesauce though. :frown: I could've sworn I bought some, but if I did, I don't know where I decided to put it. I did have sour cream though, so that was okay.

tribdog
Dec27-05, 08:25 PM
sorry I used the applesauce cause my car was a quart low and it was the slipperyest stuff you had.
I've caused an oil fire before and I gotta say it was pretty intense. I forgot about the oil I was heating up to cook some french fries. Smoke really gets your attention I'm glad it was invented.

rachmaninoff
Dec27-05, 09:03 PM
I still think frying would be better off under dry nitrogen. Safer for one.

tribdog
Dec27-05, 09:04 PM
you want adventure, try this next. bacon while naked.

Ouabache
Dec27-05, 11:50 PM
I expected latkes was soon to follow, when you went on about hot oil. I made some too for a group of 30. Boy did they gobble them down. Made sure there was plenty of apple-sauce and sour cream. No cutting corners, we had two hand graters in action, used close to 10lbs of spuds. I didn't break out the lab goggles but did wear safety glasses :cool:

Though the humble potato is a newcomer to Europe introduced (http://collections.ic.gc.ca/potato/history/migration.asp) from So America in 1500s, the people of Eastern Europe took the humble potato pancake and raised it to a state of scrumptious perfection.. I once saw a documentary with Michael Palin, where he was travelling through some remote part of Russia. They came in from the frigid snowy tundra to a warm steamy kitchen. We watched, as their guide prepared breakfast of potato pancakes, the familiar old fashioned way, sizzling in lots of oil.. Yummm! :tongue2: So this Chanukah tradition actually stems from Eastern European culture. Can some of our PF friends in that part of the world offer their perspective?

tribdog
Dec28-05, 10:14 PM
I don't think I've ever had a latke

Ouabache
Dec28-05, 10:17 PM
you want adventure, try this next. bacon while naked. BTDT :biggrin:

tribdog
Dec28-05, 10:19 PM
amazing how unerringly accurate those grease splatters are isn't it

Ouabache
Dec29-05, 12:21 AM
same goes for spooning into the open half of a grapefruit :bugeye:

rachmaninoff
Dec29-05, 12:24 AM
same goes for spooning into the open half of a grapefruit :bugeye:

Wear your chemical goggles for that one! :eek:

DocToxyn
Dec29-05, 11:07 AM
sorry I used the applesauce cause my car was a quart low and it was the slipperyest stuff you had.

I have a hard time believing that applesauce was the slipperiest thing Moonbear's got around her house.:devil: :tongue2: :blushing:

Danger
Dec29-05, 01:50 PM
It's the slipperiest edible thing that she... never mind; that's wrong too.

Ouabache
Dec29-05, 02:51 PM
Wear your chemical goggles for that one! :rofl:

I still think frying would be better off under dry nitrogen. Safer for one. what is dry nitrogen? Do you mean a chamber at RT with just N_2 in it?