Why do grease, cheese, butter, jam, etc., stick to smooth surfaces?

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Grease, cheese, butter, and jam adhere to smooth surfaces due to a property known as "stickiness," which arises from electromagnetic attractions between the molecules of the food and the surface. To reduce this stickiness and allow for easier release without heating, surfaces can be coated with materials that counteract these attractions. The effectiveness of these coatings varies depending on the specific surface and substance involved.
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Why do things like grease, cheese, butter, jam, etc. stick to smooth surfaces like a butter knife or teflon?
What are the ways in which they would not stick and be allowed to release without being heated?
 
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Welcome to PF;
They stick to surfaces because the possesses lots of a material property called "stickiness".
Stickiness comes from electromagnetic attraction between the molecules of the substance and the molecules of the surface.

You can reduce stickiness by coating the surface with something that counteracts the stickiness.
The details depend on the exact surface and substance.

http://www.thenakedscientists.com/HTML/questions/question/1000174/
 
Thank You Simon. This was indeed very helpful! :)
 
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