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Foam (culinary)

In cuisine, foam is a gelled or stabilized liquid in which air is suspended. Foams have been present in many forms over the history of cooking, such as whipped cream, meringue and mousse. In these cases, the incorporation of air, or another gas, creates a lighter texture and a different mouthfeel. Foams add flavor without significant substance, and thus allow cooks to integrate new flavors without changing the physical composition of a dish.[1]

Foam Fondue with extra Foam, a dish topped with culinary foam prepared from skyr

More recently, foams have become a part of molecular gastronomy technique. In these cases, natural flavors (such as fruit juices, infusions of aromatic herbs, etc.) are mixed with a neutrally-flavored gelling or stabilizing agent such as agar or lecithin, and either whipped with a hand-held immersion blender or extruded through a whipped cream canister equipped with nitrous oxide cartridges. Some famous food-foams are foamed espresso, foamed mushroom, foamed beet and foamed coconut. An espuma or thermo whip is commonly used to make these foams through the making of a stock, creating a gel and extruding through the nitrous oxide canister.[2]

Creating culinary foam edit

 
Parmesan foam on a dinner entrée

To form a stable foam and emulsion, a surfactant, such as lecithin, monoglycerides or proteins, must be present to reduce the interfacial tension between the air-oil phase and the aqueous phase. If the surfactants are at equal concentrations at the interface, proteins are generally less effective than small surfactants, such as lecithin or monoglycerides, at decreasing the interfacial tension. Of course, this is not true of heated soybean or whey protein, which readily forms copious foam.

Foams consist of two phases, an aqueous phase and a gaseous (air) phase. Foams have been used in many forms in the history of cooking, for example: whipped cream, ice cream, cakes, meringue, soufflés, mousse and marshmallow. It has a unique light texture because of the tiny air bubbles and/or a different mouthfeel. In most of these products, proteins are the main surface active agents that help in the formation and stabilization of the dispersed gas phase. To create a protein-stabilized foam, it usually involves bubbling, whipping or shaking a protein solution and its foaming properties refers to its capacity to form a thin tenacious film at the gas-liquid interface for large amounts of gas bubbles to become incorporated and stabilized.

When protein concentrations are increased to their maximum value the foaming powers and foam formation are generally increased. Often to compare foaming properties of various proteins, the foaming power at a specific protein concentration is determined.

A protein will always have certain stresses that it must overcome, such as gravitational and mechanical; it is the protein's ability to stabilize foam against these stresses that determines the foam's stability. The foam's stability is usually expressed as the time required for 50% of the liquid to drain from foam (a 50% reduction in foam volume).[3]

References edit

  1. ^ Robert Love (April 7, 2009). "Salad of Shaved Fennel, Aged Pecorino, Yuzu Froth". Food & Love (blog). Archived from the original on July 9, 2012. Retrieved April 17, 2009. (This recipe utilizes a froth of yuzu juice.)
  2. ^ The Phantom Chef (11 August 2007). . The Belly Rules The Mind (blog). Archived from the original on 8 February 2008. Retrieved 5 April 2008.
  3. ^ Owen R. Fennema (2008). Fennema's Food Chemistry. Boca Raton, Florida.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

foam, culinary, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, foam, culinary, news, newspapers, books, scholar, js. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Foam culinary news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2007 Learn how and when to remove this message In cuisine foam is a gelled or stabilized liquid in which air is suspended Foams have been present in many forms over the history of cooking such as whipped cream meringue and mousse In these cases the incorporation of air or another gas creates a lighter texture and a different mouthfeel Foams add flavor without significant substance and thus allow cooks to integrate new flavors without changing the physical composition of a dish 1 Foam Fondue with extra Foam a dish topped with culinary foam prepared from skyr More recently foams have become a part of molecular gastronomy technique In these cases natural flavors such as fruit juices infusions of aromatic herbs etc are mixed with a neutrally flavored gelling or stabilizing agent such as agar or lecithin and either whipped with a hand held immersion blender or extruded through a whipped cream canister equipped with nitrous oxide cartridges Some famous food foams are foamed espresso foamed mushroom foamed beet and foamed coconut An espuma or thermo whip is commonly used to make these foams through the making of a stock creating a gel and extruding through the nitrous oxide canister 2 Creating culinary foam edit nbsp Parmesan foam on a dinner entree To form a stable foam and emulsion a surfactant such as lecithin monoglycerides or proteins must be present to reduce the interfacial tension between the air oil phase and the aqueous phase If the surfactants are at equal concentrations at the interface proteins are generally less effective than small surfactants such as lecithin or monoglycerides at decreasing the interfacial tension Of course this is not true of heated soybean or whey protein which readily forms copious foam Foams consist of two phases an aqueous phase and a gaseous air phase Foams have been used in many forms in the history of cooking for example whipped cream ice cream cakes meringue souffles mousse and marshmallow It has a unique light texture because of the tiny air bubbles and or a different mouthfeel In most of these products proteins are the main surface active agents that help in the formation and stabilization of the dispersed gas phase To create a protein stabilized foam it usually involves bubbling whipping or shaking a protein solution and its foaming properties refers to its capacity to form a thin tenacious film at the gas liquid interface for large amounts of gas bubbles to become incorporated and stabilized When protein concentrations are increased to their maximum value the foaming powers and foam formation are generally increased Often to compare foaming properties of various proteins the foaming power at a specific protein concentration is determined A protein will always have certain stresses that it must overcome such as gravitational and mechanical it is the protein s ability to stabilize foam against these stresses that determines the foam s stability The foam s stability is usually expressed as the time required for 50 of the liquid to drain from foam a 50 reduction in foam volume 3 References edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Culinary foam nbsp Food portal Robert Love April 7 2009 Salad of Shaved Fennel Aged Pecorino Yuzu Froth Food amp Love blog Archived from the original on July 9 2012 Retrieved April 17 2009 This recipe utilizes a froth of yuzu juice The Phantom Chef 11 August 2007 How To Make Culinary Foam The Belly Rules The Mind blog Archived from the original on 8 February 2008 Retrieved 5 April 2008 Owen R Fennema 2008 Fennema s Food Chemistry Boca Raton Florida a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Foam culinary amp oldid 1135604859, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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