Why we cook food in oil

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  • Опубликовано: 13 май 2024
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Комментарии • 4,1 тыс.

  • @Movie_Games
    @Movie_Games 2 года назад +14755

    Oil is Thermal Paste, but for food

    • @duckonaroll1913
      @duckonaroll1913 2 года назад +549

      it’s like if thermal paste also boosted the cpu’s performance even without the heat protection

    • @maxwellwoodhouse2908
      @maxwellwoodhouse2908 2 года назад +86

      Reminded me of an oil filled radiator heater.
      because not only does it make a full surface contact with a heating element but allows for convection to occur which can probably spread heat throughout a radiator quicker. Like for heating houses or cooling down industrial grade electrical transformers.

    • @_NguyenDinhKhoi
      @_NguyenDinhKhoi 2 года назад +74

      Wh...wait you actually got a point

    • @KenshiroPlayDotA
      @KenshiroPlayDotA 2 года назад +155

      Next on Adam's channel : Why I use the pea-sized dot method on my cutting board, NOT my steak
      After that on Adam's channel : Why I brush liquid metal on my steak

    • @linuscracktips4986
      @linuscracktips4986 2 года назад +87

      "This video was sponsored by Cooler Master, the best way to deep fry fast!"

  • @jamesavery3727
    @jamesavery3727 2 года назад +4303

    The experiment style approach to learning cooking concepts is unparalleled

    • @emrefifty5281
      @emrefifty5281 2 года назад +75

      that’s why Adam is so successful no joke

    • @bartekkrol226
      @bartekkrol226 2 года назад +29

      @@emrefifty5281 I was gonna say the same thing but about Adam and Kenji Lopez-Alt

    • @evanduvall2359
      @evanduvall2359 2 года назад +4

      My top three.

    • @thirstyfajita4115
      @thirstyfajita4115 2 года назад +7

      Only problem is it wastes alot of food

    • @nataliedavis8675
      @nataliedavis8675 2 года назад +16

      @@thirstyfajita4115 It does, unfortunately I think most forms of cooking media do the same :/ unfortunately comes with the territory

  • @Eldalion99999
    @Eldalion99999 Год назад +1694

    I absolutely loved this video. When I was self learning how to cook, 99% people I asked had no idea nor they cared about why things are done the way the are, and it was making me crazy.

    • @rav9066
      @rav9066 Год назад +14

      real

    • @woIfies
      @woIfies Год назад +85

      It's so much easier to cook when you finally find channels run by a channel run by either knowledgeable professionals or folks dedicated enough like Ragusea to find the answers. I understand why every chef or person who cooks can't be a food scientist but damn it's harder to cook when you are learning from people who are just blindly copying what their parents did

    • @ATTACKofthe6STRINGS
      @ATTACKofthe6STRINGS Год назад +8

      This just unlocked a bunch of cooking brain things in my head. As far as I know, my mom doesn’t really cook with oil? At least, I recognize that weird, spotty coloration from some of the foods she makes. Either she doesn’t use oil, or she doesn’t use enough, for enough foods.

    • @darkshadow2314
      @darkshadow2314 Год назад +1

      Nerd lol

    • @navrez3100
      @navrez3100 10 месяцев назад +11

      @@darkshadow2314 is there any problem with being a nerd?

  • @dewilew2137
    @dewilew2137 Год назад +611

    It’s interesting how folks who cook just sort of know this instinctively, but would probably not be able to put it into words or describe the role the oil plays as well as you did. You nailed it! 👍🏽

    • @emptyallen3334
      @emptyallen3334 Год назад +3

      Don't chefs go through Gastronomy and Food Chemistry??

    • @Junebug89
      @Junebug89 Год назад +44

      @@emptyallen3334 She said "people who cook" though, not "chefs". As much as my grandmother likes to insist that my cooking spree lately means I should become a chef, they are very much not the same thing :p

    • @JudojugsVtuber
      @JudojugsVtuber 6 месяцев назад

      Hi I know this is like a year old but just stopping in to mention that I'm a career cook with ten years of culinary experience. No they do not teach you much in the way of food chemistry unless you go to culinary college (which many people in the culinary world view as a scam) and only really get a passing knowledge of things like the maillard reaction. Really you just get taught how to do things not why you do things. Very few culinary teachers will take efforts to teach the why as most culinary programs in schools are designed to print out more cooks more than they are trying to educate people about cooking. This is mostly from a US citizen perspective however and may differ minorly in other countries although I haven't heard much different from my colleagues in other countries myself.@@emptyallen3334

    • @cheese-bg1xq
      @cheese-bg1xq 5 месяцев назад +1

      Knowing how to follow instructions is very different from knowing why they exist

    • @hetedeleambacht6608
      @hetedeleambacht6608 2 месяца назад

      @@cheese-bg1xq well put

  • @MrKelsomatic
    @MrKelsomatic 2 года назад +1522

    One of my favorite kinds of semi-scientific tests is “do the thing no one would ever do.”
    Not only does it often reveal the reasoning and value behind things we take for granted, but sometimes you also find out things that are accepted as having value might not!

    • @Zestric
      @Zestric 2 года назад +21

      Isn't cooking without oil exactly what everyones mum did 25 years ago?

    • @bragapedro
      @bragapedro 2 года назад +133

      That's exactly how I found out that eating pasta with milk as if it was cereal is a fucking horrible idea. Not really planning on stopping my experiments, though

    • @shadr_
      @shadr_ 2 года назад +18

      @@bragapedro lmao

    • @N3K0Cloud
      @N3K0Cloud 2 года назад +19

      @@Zestric not really, my grandma would always cook in beef/lamp fat, they didn't use oil but they did use fat a LOT.

    • @RosesAndIvy
      @RosesAndIvy 2 года назад +8

      @@N3K0Cloud lamp fat?? Like, kerosene?

  • @zQWASZX
    @zQWASZX 2 года назад +3455

    This video is an excellent example of "Show don't tell", I loved how for every example you said "Let's try it" and just showed the results! One of the reasons I value your channel is you get right to the point and show the action clearly

    • @JigenLune
      @JigenLune 2 года назад +22

      I like how he doesn't explain it when he doesn't know it.

    • @sarahbelle81
      @sarahbelle81 2 года назад +7

      "Show don't tell" doesn't apply to everything

    • @d1oftwins
      @d1oftwins 2 года назад +44

      @@sarahbelle81 I guess I missed the part in the original comment were he said "Show don't tell" applies to everything.

    • @mandarinduck
      @mandarinduck 2 года назад +3

      @@d1oftwins Yeah, but it doesn't really apply here. Show don't tell is writing advice for narrative storytelling.

    • @d1oftwins
      @d1oftwins 2 года назад +23

      @@mandarinduck Just because it is commonly used in one context doesn't mean it can't be applied in another. It is like saying that you called dibs on a certain term so nobody can use it elsewhere, that is just silly.

  • @lolmanthecat
    @lolmanthecat Год назад +44

    A true hero: used both Celsius and Fahrenheit!
    I'll just add that usually naan is cooked at 400 degrees Celsius (752 degrees Fahrenheit) so some things should be different in the pan!

  • @notmarkprecioso
    @notmarkprecioso 3 месяца назад +22

    I thought you were Markiplier

    • @toramgang
      @toramgang Месяц назад

      Exactly thought the same 😂

  • @pepperet5216
    @pepperet5216 2 года назад +12327

    my mom hates cooking with oil and i genuinely cant express how much worse everything tastes without it

    • @velocibadgery
      @velocibadgery 2 года назад +2376

      Your mom just hates cooking in general

    • @pepperet5216
      @pepperet5216 2 года назад +1560

      @@velocibadgery she does and it's awful having to not eat anything she makes in general lmao

    • @VictoriaMeira7
      @VictoriaMeira7 2 года назад +1361

      mine insists on using as little oil as possible while frying, yet is always surprised when the pan ends up burning

    • @ronanmcintyre
      @ronanmcintyre 2 года назад +714

      Yeah my housemate also tries to avoid oil/fat/butter in her cooking and it causes some weird results. Recently I saw a dry-looking omelette with scorched patches on the bottom and another time she wrapped a salmon fillet in aluminium foil, put it on a teflon pan and just let it go. Weirdest cooking method I've ever seen I think (especially because salmon is like one of the fattiest fish anyway).

    • @darkee03
      @darkee03 2 года назад +201

      Tell her to use fat then, 400iq solution

  • @garyermann
    @garyermann 2 года назад +5558

    To spread some knowledge, it's not just how the brussels sprouts are prepared that makes them taste better. Just a few years ago the brussels sprout crop was transitioned over to a cultivar that was specifically bred to get rid of the bitterness once associated with the vegetable. The brussels sprouts sold today are pretty much completely different than the vegetable that was infamous for its awful taste.

    • @abcrx32j
      @abcrx32j 2 года назад +577

      F for the people from the past who had to suffer for that to be a thing

    • @jaydenslaptop6548
      @jaydenslaptop6548 2 года назад +88

      But I like bitter

    • @IDontKnow-pf6en
      @IDontKnow-pf6en 2 года назад +37

      i was gonna say that as well! glad you did it already so i dont have to type it out again hahahaha. God Bless!

    • @huldreich287
      @huldreich287 2 года назад +335

      Is it true or are you an employee from the brussels sprout lobby trying to trick me ?

    • @Roger__Wilco
      @Roger__Wilco 2 года назад +147

      Even in the past though the main problem was that most peoples bad experiences with them were of way overcooked sprouts (mainly boiled to shit) to the point that the sulfuric and bitter taste comes out, when they're lightly baked they're very mild tasting.

  • @sagenosnibor9173
    @sagenosnibor9173 Год назад +189

    Thanks for putting the sponsor at the end. I actually listen to the full ad knowing you left it for last and gave us what we wanted when we originally clicked on the video. No interruptions or cheesy plugs.
    You rule!

    • @el0j
      @el0j Год назад +2

      lol why would you watch an ad just because it didn't interrupt you

    • @sagenosnibor9173
      @sagenosnibor9173 Год назад +15

      @@el0j don't need to explain. Glad it could make you laugh tho 👍🏾

    • @garrison4173
      @garrison4173 Год назад +2

      @@el0jsupports creators

    • @ParisFletcher
      @ParisFletcher 10 месяцев назад +1

      Yeah, more creators should be putting sponsors at the end of the video, I ALMOST ALWAYS skip sponsors placed in the middle of the video, and fairly considerably lesser so at the end (I wonder if the companies even realize that).

    • @goat1596
      @goat1596 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@ChaosLord5129the ad or the person who made this video?

  • @SandyGarnelle
    @SandyGarnelle 6 месяцев назад +4

    0:15 - "a little of olive oil" dude are you like i dunno BLIND this is an ocean

  • @BarnyTrubble
    @BarnyTrubble 2 года назад +1053

    I feel like it bears mentioning, through selective farming techniques, brussels sprouts are actually better now than they were when we were all kids 20+ years ago and demand for them has risen accordingly. The brussels sprouts we are eating today, are not the same brussels sprouts our mothers boiled for us as children and insisted we eat to clean our plates. It's an interesting topic that I would love to see Adam actually explore from a much more informed than my own food science perspective!

    • @Killakatnage89
      @Killakatnage89 2 года назад +10

      I think they taste worse now tbh

    • @christiansehlmeyer7149
      @christiansehlmeyer7149 2 года назад +65

      @rasa porosangue "What I've Learned" is an incredibly uneducated and biased youtube channel. They don't know much about actual nutrition.

    • @Caio-sw7hh
      @Caio-sw7hh 2 года назад +15

      i dont unferstand why ppl have to say “ou animal fat is healthier” theyre both bad
      eat your soybean oil or your butter just dont say its a healthy alternative to angthing, cause its not.

    • @rileyvonbevern4652
      @rileyvonbevern4652 2 года назад +7

      Key word "boiled"

    • @Magnulus76
      @Magnulus76 2 года назад +2

      @@Killakatnage89 Yeah, they seem to be milder and less bold in flavor. I like a brussel sprout that bites me back.

  • @iainhansen1047
    @iainhansen1047 2 года назад +764

    This series really scratches the same scientific food itch as good eats and I love it!

    • @eggydrums
      @eggydrums 2 года назад +14

      This was the reason I subbed to Adam. Since the first time I was exposed to his channel with the infamous “Why I season my board and not my steak” many years ago, it immediately jumped on me how similar a feel I get from him as I did from Anton on Good Eats.

    • @adityasrinivasulu
      @adityasrinivasulu 2 года назад +4

      @@eggydrums ah yes, Anton Brüne!

    • @ov3rcl0cked
      @ov3rcl0cked 2 года назад +11

      I actually like Adam more than Alton, not to say I don't appreciate Alton, but Adam is much more of the mentality "make food you want to eat" because people have their own preferences and Alton is about doing it "the right way" and kind of shaming you on your preferences if they aren't "right". Adam also does amazing journalistic views into interesting histories and cultures of food that I really appreciate, and doesn't have to adhere to a strict format like a show on TV does. He can post instructional videos on how to make things, a video on how Georgia became known for peaches, and then another day a video based entirely around a sponsor that's still really interesting to watch.

    • @WanderTheNomad
      @WanderTheNomad 2 года назад +1

      @@jdavis37378 who's "we"?

    • @Daria-rk6qc
      @Daria-rk6qc 2 года назад

      ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 💜 NUDE.SNAPGIRLS.TODAY/barbie 💜 PRIVATE S*X
      LET'S MAKE LOVE HONEY 💜
      #ライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!#この日のライブ配信は、#かならりやばかったですね!1#万人を超える人が見ていたもんね(笑)#やっぱり人参最高!#まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもドキドキでした!#今後は気を付けないとね5). .
      !💖🖤❤#今後は気をライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!#この日のライブ配信は、#1万人を超える人が見ていたも ん(#笑)#やっぱり人参最高!#まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもドキドキでした #今後は気をライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!( #笑)#垃圾

  • @cynthiajose7787
    @cynthiajose7787 2 года назад +2

    Loved this video. It answered all those questions which were bursting in my head since so long. The best part- more action, less talking. It was to the point, honest and compact. 😘

  • @Alchoholics_Anonymous
    @Alchoholics_Anonymous Год назад +85

    I kinda tested this on my own a couple weeks ago, was running low on my cooking oil and didn't want to take the time to cook the bacon to replenished it so I tried just winging it. I thought I noticed it was taking longer to cook, definitely noticed the difference in flavor

    • @walter9240
      @walter9240 Год назад +12

      And that’s with bacon, somethin that already adds fat to the pan

  • @neversparky
    @neversparky 2 года назад +832

    The oven having a smaller difference than the pan actually makes sense since with an oven, you're relying on the surrounding air to transfer heat to your food. Since it's able to flow around to any of the exposed surface area, it already serves as a thermal interface you can rely on!

    • @nickthegreat9434
      @nickthegreat9434 2 года назад +31

      I was thinking the exact same, not much of a difference in heat disparity cus its already travelling through completely pliable air to get to it! No insult but Im almost surprised Adam didnt that about that too.

    • @SeeNickView
      @SeeNickView 2 года назад +5

      Great point! And the metal pan serving as a conductor of heat didn't do as well for the same reasons as with the skillet on the stove with the Brussels sprouts

    • @jasonslade6259
      @jasonslade6259 2 года назад +6

      I agree, importantly in the pan the heat has the entire room to escape into, inside the oven the hot air is mostly enclosed so it stays in contact with the food.

    • @mat5473
      @mat5473 2 года назад +5

      Yeah it's like the example of putting a lid on the brussel sprouts to steam them faster. Even without the water...putting a lid on a dry pan would also cook stuff faster.

    • @Banom7a
      @Banom7a 2 года назад +2

      that's also how air fryer work
      (well, air fryer is just mini convection oven anyway)

  • @SanlyLiuu
    @SanlyLiuu 2 года назад +3123

    *flipping meat with his hand when the cooking oil splashing*
    Me : “wow, *BRAVE* ”

    • @Nusma
      @Nusma 2 года назад +26

      stunning and brave...

    • @waffle8364
      @waffle8364 2 года назад +33

      Me: wow.. stupid

    • @agni_oh
      @agni_oh 2 года назад +31

      Wow grape🍇

    • @rgbglass7163
      @rgbglass7163 2 года назад +51

      @@waffle8364 not really. Just doesn't care about the minor burns.

    • @boredbrocc
      @boredbrocc 2 года назад +4

      i do that most of the times when i cook

  • @dude4173
    @dude4173 7 месяцев назад +19

    You have a great ability to communicate. Very articulate and well thought out in your delivery.

  • @jacob2834
    @jacob2834 Год назад +5

    Great video. Started with a question, got right to the point with answers. No filler. Superb job creating content for people to enjoy.

  • @Shadeadder
    @Shadeadder 2 года назад +2943

    I remember watching a cooking youtuber who frequently told her audience, "Try frying in water, you seriously won't notice a difference!" and I wondered who she was trying to fool.

    • @killerkirby366
      @killerkirby366 2 года назад +104

      I mens technicslly it would work
      I’d water didn’t evaporate almost immediately

    • @IceKnight678
      @IceKnight678 2 года назад +447

      Ah yes, boiled fries

    • @Arian545
      @Arian545 2 года назад +72

      @@IceKnight678 Well to be fair it is actually pretty normal to boil roasted potatoes before you roast them

    • @1erickf50
      @1erickf50 Год назад +130

      @@Arian545 yeah, the pre-boiling ensures the insides are soft and tender so that the frying completes the external crust of the plate

    • @Shadeadder
      @Shadeadder Год назад +69

      @@annabelleleete I understand this, but the problem is a lot of people who are proponents of sauteeing with water do so based on unsubstantiated fears of fats. It'd be one thing if it was a personal flavor or texture preference, but it's usually not. Such people often try to convince others and themselves that it tastes the same as oil frying -- because they actually like oil frying, but they've been scared into thinking any added fat to their diet is unhealthy.

  • @grimloncz3853
    @grimloncz3853 2 года назад +712

    In an alternate universe, where Adam does computers instead of cooking, he asks "Why do we put thermal paste on the cpu?" and then proceeds to melt a processor.

    • @ONE-pg7wd
      @ONE-pg7wd 2 года назад +28

      I think someone has actually done that

    • @victormunroe2418
      @victormunroe2418 2 года назад +59

      And then says "Long live the Empire", presumably

    • @jaydenslaptop6548
      @jaydenslaptop6548 2 года назад +18

      @@victormunroe2418 Also he has a goatee

    • @veem3176
      @veem3176 2 года назад +8

      @@ONE-pg7wd gamers Nexus , though i am pretty sure the main topic of the video was the best way to apply thermal paste

    • @tanmay4217
      @tanmay4217 2 года назад +3

      Riley and Alex tried some jank thermal pastes over at LTT

  • @throughcolouredglasses9300
    @throughcolouredglasses9300 2 года назад +173

    When I was a teen I had a bad relationship with food and I'd only ever cook my vegetables with water. This just reactivated so many memories of how mediocre food used to taste back then lol

    • @Sh-hg8kf
      @Sh-hg8kf 9 месяцев назад +10

      If you ever want to throw a flavorful spin on vegetables now, try Indian cuisine. Though I'll add the cuisine DRASTICALLY varies from state to state since you cross entire languages and cultural borders. For the most part, vegetables here are cooked in a flavorful manner across the board

    • @l21n18
      @l21n18 8 месяцев назад +2

      Why

    • @sonicartzldesignerclan5763
      @sonicartzldesignerclan5763 13 дней назад

      Vegetable shouldnt be cook only be steamed by the water steam
      So you dont lose all the vitamins and stuff

  • @thorenjohn
    @thorenjohn Год назад +4

    Beautiful videography and presentation. Thank you!

  • @evan
    @evan 2 года назад +1752

    I literally just thought it was to make it nonstick but now my brain hurts. That makes so much sense

    • @evanmacdonald9632
      @evanmacdonald9632 2 года назад +10

      Hi Evan! Love your vids and we have the same name! 😁

    • @nanoflower1
      @nanoflower1 2 года назад +41

      It's what you would naturally come to expect but then you have to ask why do we still want to use oil in a non-stick pan.

    • @CyniuxD
      @CyniuxD 2 года назад +3

      I've thought it's common sense to know it's for heat transfer.

    • @kameron1060
      @kameron1060 2 года назад +21

      I def learned a lot from this vid, but cmon now. Have you ever touched a dry pan vs a pan filled with oil? The hot oil sticks to your finger and continues to burn after you take your finger out. It’s not brain-hurting level deep lol.

    • @xPostpunk
      @xPostpunk 2 года назад +1

      @@CyniuxD same

  • @NotTylerDurden
    @NotTylerDurden 2 года назад +933

    In an oven, the enclosed space and long cook times enable heated air to act as a thermal interface. That's why oil helps if you're using a pan; the flat metal blocks the veggies from exposure to the thermal interface of the air. A wire rack would result in perfectly roasted veggies due to maximum air exposure, although you'd likely be missing caramelization still.

    • @nobodythenobody9779
      @nobodythenobody9779 2 года назад +5

      Was gonna say this but you did

    • @kennethferland5579
      @kennethferland5579 2 года назад +16

      Actually your neglecting the effects of thermal radiation. Air is actually a very poor thermal interface.

    • @NotTylerDurden
      @NotTylerDurden 2 года назад +18

      @@kennethferland5579 which is why we use oil, yes. air by itself is a poor interface so you use an intermediary interface like oil that can effectively distribute heat from the air into your food. it's why roasting takes so long in the first place.

    • @greggrobinson5116
      @greggrobinson5116 2 года назад +8

      The surface of a pan gets a lot hotter than normal oven cooking temperatures. The oil in the pan can reach ~600 dF before it starts to break down and smoke. In ovens we're rarely above ~400 dF. That's a big difference, kind of like the difference between lying down on a bonfire and sunbathing.

    • @greggrobinson5116
      @greggrobinson5116 2 года назад

      @@NotTylerDurden I'm wondering about "air fryers." I've never used one, never even seen one, so I have no idea how they work.

  • @iota_jian3666
    @iota_jian3666 7 месяцев назад +2

    I loved all of the different tests you did. You pretty much covered every question or curiosity I had.

  • @fulltimecertifiedprofessio8082

    i love how you just show me what happens rather then telling me. makes it way easier to follow

  • @AzureKite
    @AzureKite 2 года назад +988

    So I accidentally tested this video by myself making pancakes. I always start with a bit of oil, but as the pancakes cook and absorb some of it, eventually the pan runs dry. Sometimes I'm too lazy to put in more oil, so I get some pancakes that are very evenly brown and others that... well, aren't. And that was when I realized the difference between cooking in oil and no oil. But great video explaining the actual reactions and the reasons why!

    • @jesus3300
      @jesus3300 2 года назад +54

      You shouldnt need too much oil to make pancakes if you use a non stick pan, i usually drop about 2 tablespoons in the pan and use a paper towel to smear a thin layer all around the pan and dont need to to add any more oil

    • @scaramouchesola
      @scaramouchesola 2 года назад +25

      @@jesus3300 i agree with you, Jesus, i do that too

    • @SteelsCrow
      @SteelsCrow 2 года назад +14

      A thin film of oil helps cook pancakes evenly and easier to flip (lol to Adam Regusea's "film of oil"), which you get just by an initial coat of the pan and a tablespoon or two in the batter. This film is practically invisible. I'm an efficiency nut, so to coat the pan I just warm the oil so it runs easier, and tilt the pan around to get a web of streaks. Good enough.
      If you just like your pancakes oily, then you have to continually add more after it gets soaked up, like doughnuts.

    • @limerrick627
      @limerrick627 2 года назад +46

      I use butter not for the browning but because it makes it taste better.

    • @hhjones9393
      @hhjones9393 2 года назад +6

      @@limerrick627 Me too, to prevent sticking but mostly the flavor of the butter on the hot griddle adds a lot to a simple recipe.

  • @cristianaira4548
    @cristianaira4548 2 года назад +188

    This video is a great example why I love Adam's work. He addresses the "why" questions so you can find your answers to the "how".

  • @transce
    @transce 2 года назад

    Great content! Good cinematography, good sound, excellent presentation and information. That fact about naan in the dry pan makes soooo much sense! Thanks for sharing!

  • @yurymol
    @yurymol 2 года назад +272

    I can't imagine how happy I am seeing someone with 1.5M subscribers making videos like this and not a combo of "I made wagyu burgers with gold" and "Yet another 7 $3 dinners" just to have more content and appease the algorithm.

    • @ststst981
      @ststst981 2 года назад +45

      Respect to Weissman but his schtick and on-camera personality gets exhausting after a while

    • @Azul661
      @Azul661 2 года назад +11

      *Nick DiGiovanni has entered the chat*

    • @Maplecook
      @Maplecook 2 года назад +3

      I feel personally attacked. hahahahaha

    • @Azul661
      @Azul661 2 года назад +1

      @@Maplecook Nah bruh you’re good lol. Looking at your page, you’ve got some pretty unique dishes on there!

    • @Maplecook
      @Maplecook 2 года назад +2

      @@Azul661 Oh! Thanks for peeking! Cheers! =)

  • @MajoraZ
    @MajoraZ 2 года назад +566

    I'd love to see you cover is how much of the oil used in a pan ends up being ingested with the food, for calorie counting Also, there's actually an entire cultural cuisine that didn't use oils for frying or sautéing: Mesoamerican civilizations like the Aztec and Maya: They steamed, grilled, roasted on hot stones/ceramics, made sauces, smoked, salted etc food, but as far as I'm aware (and I even double checked this with presenters during a recent lecture series on Mesoamerican cuisine from a month ago) there was no intentional rendering of fat or oils to then use to saute or fry. To an extent this makes sense, since those civilizations didn't have nearly as many domesticated animals for foodstuff (just Turkey and Dog, though more was kept tamed/farmed for foodstuff in some cases) but it's still pretty interesting.
    And I want to reiterate here that this WAS a well developed culinary tradition: The Conquistador Bernal Diaz describes the Aztec Emperor Moctezuma II, for his meals, being brought over thirty dishes, across hundreds of plates for his meals, thousands including guards, attendents, other officials, etc, all on fine plates and platters, on coasters or with a large fireplace behind a screen using scented woods to prevent things from getting cold, with the tamples and stools being engraved and on fine tablecloth,es, etc. The Aztec captial of Tenochtitlan itself also had 200,000+ denizens by most estimates, in the same ballpark as the then largest cities in Europe like Paris and Constantinople, with the city also mostly being made out of artificial islands with venice like canals between them, with many palaces, temples, large plazas, a royal library, zoo, and aquarium, etc. Civilization in the region also dates back almost 3000 years before the Spanish arrived, the Aztec were among the very LATEST Mesoamerican societies: There's of course also the Maya, but also the Olmec, Zapotec, Teotihuacanos (who had a massive metropolis where nearly all it's denizens lived in fancy palaces with painted frescos, some even toilets; and had a massive planned urban grid covering nearly 2 dozen square kilometers, all 1000 years before the Aztec) Classic Veracruz, Mixtec, Totonac, Huastec, Otomi, Tlapenec, Chatino, Purepecha (who had the third largest empire in the Americas as of Spanish contact after the Inca and Aztec), etc.

    • @jayolovitt5969
      @jayolovitt5969 2 года назад +30

      I’d love if someone made a channel resurrecting/publicising those traditional Mayan and Aztec recipes (I’m sure some still survive) plus those of neighbouring cuisines pre-colonial contact. I’d try at least a recipe or two but I’m in a country where the appropriate ingredients are expensive or unavailable.

    • @wiseSYW
      @wiseSYW 2 года назад +27

      traditional/pre-industrial cooking don't use much oil, all around the world. just like the naan bread, it doesn't need oil to cook.
      oil from meat/butter is expensive, and extracting oil from seeds ("vegetable" oil) needs advanced technology.

    • @GrangerBabeGaming
      @GrangerBabeGaming 2 года назад +31

      @@wiseSYW Not so advanced as you might think... Its just very labour intensive and doesnt make a particulary high quality oil by todays standards.
      Crush (mortar and pestle) or mill (crushing stones) seeds, cook them in water, skim the water surface then strain using a porous cloth. It needs little more than pottery tech sooo... Its easier and faster with a industrial crusher and centrifuge clearly, but not impossible.

    • @wiseSYW
      @wiseSYW 2 года назад +1

      @@GrangerBabeGaming not impossible but expensive, so commoneers at that time rarely uses oil to cook

    • @khajiit92
      @khajiit92 2 года назад +18

      @@jayolovitt5969 tasting history is a channel about recreating historic recipes (though not full on historical methods most of the time). they've done a couple on mesoamerican dishes.

  • @youtube_omaro1879
    @youtube_omaro1879 Год назад +37

    I'm so glad to see someone else cook Brussel Sprouts properly

    • @synka5922
      @synka5922 Год назад +3

      my stepdad always wants them in the noodlesoup, its disgusting

    • @OwenNovakChildofGod
      @OwenNovakChildofGod Год назад +1

      @@synka5922 some people are just stuck in their own disgusting ways of eating, without realising it

    • @LordFogthe3rd
      @LordFogthe3rd Год назад

      @@OwenNovakChildofGod man just let people eat how they want

    • @jacksonraham104
      @jacksonraham104 Год назад

      Usually you can blanch them for around 55 seconds first, speeds up the cooking process and adds flavour

    • @ryanclark6402
      @ryanclark6402 3 месяца назад

      If you’re making a pan steak, you can cook them last minute in the residual meat juices and fond while the steak rests. Lovely beef fats and maybe some butter if you basted the steak. Few things better.

  • @CameraGuy19
    @CameraGuy19 Год назад +4

    All those baby cabbages could've been great adult cabbages, poor baby cabbages.

  • @danielwarren3138
    @danielwarren3138 2 года назад +122

    "Ever wonder what would happen if you just didn't?"
    I do, it's called "all the food I ate growing up". It was horrible.

    • @hiurro
      @hiurro 2 года назад +17

      same. The fact the I started liking vegetables the same time my father started putting them in the oven with butter might be a coincidence, but I doubt it.

    • @danielwarren3138
      @danielwarren3138 2 года назад +8

      @@hiurro I was led to believe I had something wrong with me for being so "fussy", in reality most of my family members were just accustomed to eating unadulterated plant matter. I don't consider it a coincidence that in adulthood I'm the only one who despises McDonalds.

    • @ileutur6863
      @ileutur6863 2 года назад +23

      @@danielwarren3138 I became known as "the cook" in my family and everyone is amazed at my recipes... meanwhile all I do is use the correct amounts of oil, fat and spice required for the dish. Good to know my family isn't the only one who suffers from bland food syndrome

    • @googlemail754
      @googlemail754 2 года назад

      Just tell your mum to not cook it's honestly what she should do poor you man

    • @danielwarren3138
      @danielwarren3138 2 года назад +2

      @@googlemail754 now that I'm in my mid 20s all that would achieve would be me offending my own mother. I think I'll pass

  • @zacknicley8150
    @zacknicley8150 2 года назад +786

    Adam Ragusea, you said what the world needs to hear: “The results are objective; whether or not you like them is subjective.” Dear man, I want to greet you with a kiss and shake your hand.

  • @perorin615
    @perorin615 Год назад +4

    i really appreciate your sort of.. realistic approach to cooking.
    too many of modern recipes have that secret ingredient known as magic. which is really only the writers ignorance or secret

  • @joecarr2224
    @joecarr2224 Год назад

    Very informative. All of AR’s presentations are clear, and to the point. Thanks.

  • @antonioscendrategattico2302
    @antonioscendrategattico2302 2 года назад +1293

    The first time I had Brussel sprouts, they were properly sauteed and I loved them. I immediately asked myself why so many people use them as THE proverbial disgusting veggie. As with a lot of green stuff, it really is down to people not knowing how to cook and just boiling stuff that shouldn't be boiled.

    • @smievil
      @smievil 2 года назад +13

      watched jean pierre talk about frying mushrooms and mentioned that it is important to get rid of the fluids in them

    • @MicukoFelton
      @MicukoFelton 2 года назад +57

      The first time I had Brussel sprouts was when I picked them from the garden myself and ate them raw. They were super delicious.

    • @antonioscendrategattico2302
      @antonioscendrategattico2302 2 года назад +119

      @@MicukoFelton I am terrified now

    • @MrOhWhatTheHeck
      @MrOhWhatTheHeck 2 года назад +4

      Boiling them is much healthier.

    • @antonioscendrategattico2302
      @antonioscendrategattico2302 2 года назад +71

      @@MrOhWhatTheHeck Healthy is not a quantity you measure. Don't exaggerate with fats and you won't have problems from cooking brussel sprouts the way God intended.
      If you want healthy, just boil or steam something that won't taste disgusting when you do that.

  • @wallahi5538
    @wallahi5538 2 года назад +413

    Finally, a sequel to “Vinegar leg is on the right”, in “Oiled food is on the right”

    • @synerzu
      @synerzu 2 года назад +3

      Here before ytp youtubers start using it

    • @1978rharris
      @1978rharris 2 года назад +2

      *vinegar CHICKEN is on the right

    • @synerzu
      @synerzu 2 года назад +19

      @@1978rharris no it's vinegar leg

    • @dodoextinct4597
      @dodoextinct4597 2 года назад +6

      I have been listening KSG for good 2 weeks straight. Kanye and kudi is god

    • @synerzu
      @synerzu 2 года назад

      @@dodoextinct4597 no one asked

  • @shashikiransundi
    @shashikiransundi Год назад +2

    I've always wondered why we cook food in oil. Thank you so much for the thorough explanation. Now I'll make sure I add enough oil for proper cooking.

  • @6Twisted
    @6Twisted Год назад +3

    Love the scientific approach to cooking techniques.

  • @Philip23243
    @Philip23243 2 года назад +131

    We have an excess of RUclips cooks who basically do the same thing, sometimes with variations.
    And then we have Adam.

    • @hansdietrich83
      @hansdietrich83 2 года назад +4

      Because this is basically engineering/science, not cooking

    • @nanashi2146
      @nanashi2146 2 года назад +6

      @@hansdietrich83 Who says they're mutually exclusive things?

    • @TheLifeLaVita
      @TheLifeLaVita 2 года назад +4

      @@hansdietrich83 cooking is literally chemistry

  • @kontainedkhaos7293
    @kontainedkhaos7293 2 года назад +120

    Adam,
    I would love to see a video about food dyes! Especially ones like the notorious red 40 that are banned in other countries.

    • @DHClapp
      @DHClapp 2 года назад +1

      I second this.

    • @o0Avalon0o
      @o0Avalon0o 2 года назад +1

      I would love learning more about food coloring, I'm just worried it really is months of research if you include all the different various types of food coloring too.

  • @jonathandurbin5534
    @jonathandurbin5534 Год назад +84

    I believe the reason there is less of a difference between the pan and the oven is mentioned but not applied. Early in the video it is mentioned that oil will cover more of the surface area and induce a heating effect between the pan and the surface of the veggie, this is because oil is a fluid, this is also true of air in the oven. The air in the oven will circulate and interface with more surface area. The reason we get the unevenness on the bottom of the nonoiled veggies is because there is a higher density of metal atoms heating the veggie compared to the air. The air and the tray are the same temperature but the heat transfer is different. This is partially due to the difference in thermal conductivity, but primarily (I think) due to the shear density of the material. More atoms per square inch, the more points on contact on average meaning more conduction and thus more heat.

  • @vincentchanal5364
    @vincentchanal5364 Год назад +3

    Very interesting! I really enjoyed the mix of cooking and science, good job!

  • @opedromagico
    @opedromagico 2 года назад +1395

    I just started experimenting to cook without oils yesterday! This video came right on time, thanks 🙌🏻

  • @patrickdasilva1581
    @patrickdasilva1581 2 года назад +421

    In the oven, you have a different thermal interface: air. So that's why the oil only makes a difference under the veggies/meat, because that's where the oil can help improve the thermal interface between the food and the plate, where air doesn't play a role but the temperature of the plate does. Oil improves the thermal interface only there; on the top and sides, it just makes the food more oily and lets the heat through the same way the air would have done directly.
    I think the reason why you saw a difference with the chicken was because of its skin that isn't permeable. The oil must have had some effect on the chicken skin, making it more heat-transmissive than the air did since air was not able to go through the skin. But my guess is as good as yours! One test that would be worth doing: three chicken breasts, one with oiled skin, one with unoiled skin, and one with unoiled skin but you use a fork to poke holes in the skin, making it permeable to air. I'm guessing the one with poked holes will cook better than the unpoked one, even with no oil.

    • @primedember5249
      @primedember5249 2 года назад +14

      Try 4 and add a poked one with oil maybe?

    • @zerick6535
      @zerick6535 Год назад +1

      Great insight! 👍

  • @karbrote24ve
    @karbrote24ve 8 месяцев назад +2

    wow this video is a masterpiece! great visuals, explanations, demonstrations, and topic. more please!

  • @InvisibleRen
    @InvisibleRen Год назад +25

    I remember the first time I cooked scallops in a pan. I was utterly shocked that it had so much natural fat. It browned fast and was almost butter-like.

  • @jepoyburner
    @jepoyburner 2 года назад +380

    This is actually my introduction to my students whenever I teach Kinetics of Heat Transfer in my Materials Engineering Classes.
    Glad that I have a well-made video to support my lecture.
    Edit: for the oven thing, I think it's because the heat is radiating from all sides and the oven has a more equal heat profile compared to stove top where the heat gradient decreases much more as you go from stove to pan.

    • @zyaicob
      @zyaicob 2 года назад +1

      yeah i was thinking black body radiation because ovens are the kind of example they used when we were getting black body questions in CAPE (Caribbean equivalent of A level) physics exams

    • @edgark6150
      @edgark6150 2 года назад

      WOW so nice to hear that You probably teach amazingly 😃

    • @IEnoro
      @IEnoro 2 года назад +6

      Loving the fact that a mechanical engineering professor uses an anime profile picture of a little girl

  • @TheRussianhippie
    @TheRussianhippie 2 года назад +430

    4:49 is actually one of my favorite ways to steam a lot of vegetables. Just enough water to get the job done, then take the lid off and hit things with some soy sauce, butter, or whatever I'm feeling that day. One pan does it all

    • @poopcock4357
      @poopcock4357 2 года назад +12

      could you give other examples than soy sauce or butter? that way of steaming sounds super easy and practical, i wanna try

    • @RhodokTribesman
      @RhodokTribesman 2 года назад +30

      @@poopcock4357 Butter is common with veggies, but oftentimes it's super good to give a spritz of lemon over your vegetables, depending on the dish they're served with. And salt of course

    • @RhodokTribesman
      @RhodokTribesman 2 года назад +16

      @@poopcock4357 Or caramelize some onions and garlic along with them for some nice umami, same with fats from previously cooked meats (veggies being cooked last) Really anything that sounds good haha

    • @colourcraze
      @colourcraze 2 года назад +6

      I do the same! Especially because I like my broccoli and sprouts a little softer. The steam helps get the insides a little more cooked, then it evaporates and I hit it with flavor and let it brown😋😋

    • @Lordmuhkuh23
      @Lordmuhkuh23 2 года назад +4

      @@poopcock4357 For any sort of mediterranean vegetables, some olive oil, garlic and a sprinkle of salt go a long way. And, if permitted, try to add a small dash of white wine to the steaming water. :)

  • @alic4631
    @alic4631 11 дней назад +1

    As a Chemist, i couldn't be more luckier to find this channel, i always thought cooking a complex chemistry. Great Demonstration!

  • @eliasperez1431
    @eliasperez1431 Год назад

    Great video never really questioned something many people use on a daily basis and with tests and situation that would cover every subject on the matter well done

  • @cookiedawg6977
    @cookiedawg6977 2 года назад +130

    When the sprouts were cooking without oil it was disturbingly silent in the background; when I watch Adam Ragusea videos apparently I'm used to the sound of crackling or bubbling underneath Adam talking

  • @ProbablyBees
    @ProbablyBees 2 года назад +128

    My parents rarely used oil when cooking. I'm finally starting to explore the food world myself. I thought oil was 90% calorie dense non-stick, 10% browns the outside faster. I have a whole new world to explore

    • @cocoleexoxo
      @cocoleexoxo 2 года назад +21

      Vitamins A,D,K,E are all fat soluble , meaning veggies cooked &eaten with oil helps with the absorption of those vitamins.

    • @austinmoore3721
      @austinmoore3721 2 года назад +12

      Bro go crazy. Try cooking whatever you want. Even if it comes out terrible. You have all the tools in your parents kitchen. If you waited to learn to cook when you move out it cost a lot more for just the needed tools. Not to mention you’ll probably have a tighter budget

  • @deanlittle6480
    @deanlittle6480 Год назад +1

    I really appreciate that he's willing to say, "I don't know," or "I'm not sure,"

  • @Crowbar
    @Crowbar 2 года назад

    I always wanted to have a satisfactory answer to this question and this video finally gave that to me! Thank you!

  • @MrSimonscool
    @MrSimonscool 2 года назад +31

    Another reason why browning doesn't occur with water, even at higher temperatures (pressure cooker) is that both caramelization and maillard reactions involve the chemical loss of water. The presence of water shifts that reaction to the left, while temperatures above the boiling point of water shift the equilibrium to the right, as water leaves as steam, and is thus unable to participate in the reverse reaction.

    • @richdobbs6595
      @richdobbs6595 2 года назад

      Even with a pressure cooker, you don't get high enough temperatures to caramelize - only about 250 F. In addition, the condensing steam would wash away tasty molecules, rather than letting them concentrate.

    • @Daria-rk6qc
      @Daria-rk6qc 2 года назад

      ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 💜 NUDE.SNAPGIRLS.TODAY/barbie 💜 PRIVATE S*X
      LET'S MAKE LOVE HONEY 💜
      #ライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!#この日のライブ配信は、#かならりやばかったですね!1#万人を超える人が見ていたもんね(笑)#やっぱり人参最高!#まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもドキドキでした!#今後は気を付けないとね5). .
      !💖🖤❤#今後は気をライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!#この日のライブ配信は、#1万人を超える人が見ていたも ん(#笑)#やっぱり人参最高!#まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもドキドキでした #今後は気をライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!( #笑)#垃圾

  • @eneekmot
    @eneekmot 2 года назад +46

    This was covered in your elementary school science class! There are three types of heat transfer: Conduction, Convection, and Radiation. Putting food in a pan with no oil only gets you conduction, metal-on-food contact heat transfer. Oil and water and steam give you convection, the fluid transfers the heat to the food and it circulates a bit, giving the results described here which are highly dependent on the temperature of the fluid. Your oven uses convection as the air is heated, and it can also transfer heat via radiation on the top of your food if you turn the broiler on.

  • @mu4784
    @mu4784 Год назад

    Just the simple act of "Let's try it out!" is such a simple and fundamentally genious way of teaching!

  • @ettinakitten5047
    @ettinakitten5047 Год назад +24

    I think the difference in importance of oil between oven and pan is because the oven heats from all directions instead of just from beneath. The enclosed space traps hot air and creates a more even temperature overall.

  • @jrumbo_6946
    @jrumbo_6946 7 месяцев назад +3

    I have to say I’ve not seen that many “good” cooking videos but this sir, this was a masterpiece

  • @rayanrahal2944
    @rayanrahal2944 2 года назад +428

    You mentioned in an older Q&A that you were considering attempting a burger recipe- is that in the works at all? I know you’ve mentioned your reservations about it but I’d love to see your take on burgers :)

    • @Pickchore
      @Pickchore 2 года назад +11

      I second this comment.
      Hamburger please.

    • @bar111a.5
      @bar111a.5 2 года назад +9

      I wonder if he'd do a "smash" style burger or a rather thick burger? Both are great and tasty

    • @Iamwrongbut
      @Iamwrongbut 2 года назад +5

      I would love to see him do an Impossible burger or something like that

    • @bar111a.5
      @bar111a.5 2 года назад +3

      @@IamwrongbutI'd like him to show us different types of burger w different types of meats
      Also cool username lol

    • @Jaigarful
      @Jaigarful 2 года назад +2

      I'm a big fan of Kenji Lopez Alt's Ultra Smash Burger recipe, by far my favorite way to make burgers. The thing is, the way Adam does his food videos, they're far more informational/instructional than most food videos I see which I would say falls into the food porn category. How does he incorporate this into a food video? Toasting vs. non-toasting, when to season the meat, is it worth grinding your own meat/baking your own buns, condiments, etc?

  • @chloeme3589
    @chloeme3589 2 года назад +12

    What a beautifully executed video!! Having an experiment to every option was amaaazing. Add a well-spoken, kind-looking, enthusiastic host and you've got this great piece of a video. *chef's kiss

  • @robobrain10000
    @robobrain10000 7 месяцев назад +11

    I asked my mom this exact question when I was learning to cook and insisted we try cooking in water, and she just laughed at me without explaining. Now I know.
    I was insisting on using water, because oily pans and plates were harder to clean.

  • @starwarsfamilyguy0
    @starwarsfamilyguy0 2 месяца назад

    It's so cool you actually look into strange questions like this, i was wondering this

  • @coachsteve.
    @coachsteve. 2 года назад +204

    This is exactly why I cook with the same thermal paste I use on my CPU.

    • @swedneck
      @swedneck 2 года назад +11

      and why i use thermal mayo in my rig

    • @Hafiz100ify
      @Hafiz100ify 2 года назад

      Big brain

    • @BosSupes
      @BosSupes 2 года назад +3

      Same, cover that pan like I'm building the Verge PC

    • @ronnycook3569
      @ronnycook3569 2 года назад

      Overclock enough and and you don't even need the frying pan.

    • @Daria-rk6qc
      @Daria-rk6qc 2 года назад

      ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 💜 NUDE.SNAPGIRLS.TODAY/barbie 💜 PRIVATE S*X
      LET'S MAKE LOVE HONEY 💜
      #ライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!#この日のライブ配信は、#かならりやばかったですね!1#万人を超える人が見ていたもんね(笑)#やっぱり人参最高!#まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもドキドキでした!#今後は気を付けないとね5). .
      !💖🖤❤#今後は気をライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!#この日のライブ配信は、#1万人を超える人が見ていたも ん(#笑)#やっぱり人参最高!#まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもドキドキでした #今後は気をライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!( #笑)#垃圾

  • @kwoni3337
    @kwoni3337 2 года назад +38

    I kept getting recommended this and I thought "I already know why", regardless still an entertaining video to watch and I'm sure it is informative for a lot of people. Nice video adam

  • @eljay5009
    @eljay5009 2 года назад +1

    I started cooking sprouts like this a few years back - they are awesome. Really nutty and sweet. I still like steamed sprouts - but pan fried are awesome.

  • @kengoold7157
    @kengoold7157 2 года назад

    just found your channel, love your work. Ken, Australia

  • @ryanb82
    @ryanb82 2 года назад +3

    This is why I love your channel; shaking up what I've always accepted as factual when cooking in the kitchen and making it both easier on me as a home cook, and making the end result much tastier than before.
    Bravo, good sir.

  • @EthanDyTioco
    @EthanDyTioco 2 года назад +10

    9:02 - your eyes light up when tasting the oil fried bread. that was wholesome

  • @paige1816
    @paige1816 Год назад

    I enjoyed this program.

  • @amywong6618
    @amywong6618 2 года назад +447

    My mom uses no oil or as little oil as possible to cook because she’s afraid I might “develop unhealthy eating habits” if more oil was added. So growing up I thought fast food such as Domino’s, McDonald’s and Popeyes were very luxurious because a. I only got to eat them once or twice every year. b. They tasted soooo much better than the food we had at home or those healthier restaurants we frequented.
    Now I’m in my 20’s, still craving fried chicken and oily pizza more than anything else. But sadly, as much as I yearn for them in my head, when I actually buy, say, a 8 pc KFC chicken bucket, I could never manage to consume more than 2 pieces without feeling so full that I have to eat purely vegetables for the next several days. The food my stomach can handle aren’t the most desirable in my head, while the food I crave in my head are rejected by my stomach. Sure, I’m able to stay lean without any efforts, but at what cost.

    • @nameless488
      @nameless488 Год назад +47

      That sounds so sad

    • @AnimationesMeae
      @AnimationesMeae Год назад +121

      That sounds amazing.. can we switch microbiome or something?

    • @shrmp02
      @shrmp02 Год назад +261

      I mean your mom is right tho, fast food is trash food

    • @fragilrtoothpickleggedwhit1866
      @fragilrtoothpickleggedwhit1866 Год назад +11

      @@shrmp02 no it isn't ..

    • @shrmp02
      @shrmp02 Год назад +133

      @@fragilrtoothpickleggedwhit1866 Bro I had kidney stones at 15 because my parents were always getting fastfood.

  • @tombax1653
    @tombax1653 2 года назад +51

    Let's take a moment to appreciate how many times he had to brillo that pan between takes after burning one of everything in it.

  • @linasalamanca878
    @linasalamanca878 Год назад +1

    I would love to see a video comparing or analyzing deep fried vs airfried.
    Love from Colombia

  • @pepeelghetto1231
    @pepeelghetto1231 11 месяцев назад

    Yo this is one of my favorite videos ever, I've watched like 10 times already and still click on It each time It pops up

  • @InsertShankHere
    @InsertShankHere 2 года назад +9

    Thank you, Adam, for providing answers to questions I’ve always had but haven’t cared enough to figure out for myself

  • @FtanmoOfEtheirys
    @FtanmoOfEtheirys 2 года назад +25

    It's interesting. A lot of Japanese cruisine let's us cook in a pan with a piece of parchment paper. For example: Cooking salmon on parchment paper in a stovetop pan allows the fish to cook using only its own oils without intaking additional unnecessary oil.

    • @p3pable
      @p3pable 2 года назад +1

      Can you tell me what's it called? I want to see how are you cooking with paper

  • @Kite403
    @Kite403 4 месяца назад +1

    I didn't have well-made brussel sprouts before as a kid, but once I did, they became on of my favorite vegetable sides. Something about light oil cooking makes everything taste more alive in my opinion

  • @MichaelBristow137
    @MichaelBristow137 2 года назад

    After seeing how to cook brussel sprouts in butter and salting, I fell in love with them. Sometimes I'll just eat a mound of them for dinner.

  • @Elena-tj3so
    @Elena-tj3so 2 года назад +103

    My hypothesis on why the oven cooked food didn't show nearly as big a difference between oil and no oil is because in an enclosed oven the hot air envelops the food in the same way water does when you boil food. You don't see this effect on the pan because the hot air directly above the pan just escapes into room temp kitchen air around it instead of lingering.

    • @GogiRegion
      @GogiRegion 2 года назад +14

      Ovens work by heating from all sides. The stove works by heating on one side. Something that increases surface area is irrelevant when the surface area is already maximized.

    • @justpelumii9986
      @justpelumii9986 Год назад

      Exactly

  • @snozzmcberry2366
    @snozzmcberry2366 2 года назад +34

    Anyone who has ever built a PC should realize the answer to this question immediately. It's thermal paste, but between your pan & your food rather than your CPU & your heat sink. It's fluid so it spreads, viscous so it has sufficient surface tension to get a good coverage on the food, it's heat-tolerant, and most importantly, it can reach temperatures high enough for caramelizing & maillard reaction..ing while staying in its liquid state, rather than boil off like water.
    LOOK AT HOW SMART I AM FIGURING OUT THE ANSWER TO THE QUESTION BEFORE WATCHING THE VIDEO HURKADURK

    • @alice73333
      @alice73333 2 года назад +1

      😂 good one

    • @snozzmcberry2366
      @snozzmcberry2366 2 года назад

      @fax I've blocked annoying parts of the RUclips website, which unfortunately keeps the "report"-popup from showing up. Anyone mind reporting this garbage as spam for me?

    • @ilikewaffles3689
      @ilikewaffles3689 2 года назад +1

      @@snozzmcberry2366 👍

  • @jorgecorea7528
    @jorgecorea7528 Год назад +23

    You can think of oil like the thermal paste you put on your CPU, it allows for much better contact between the CPU surface (IHS) and your CPU cooler surface, and it is a material with a high termal conductivity for more efficient dissipation.
    With cooking oil it's the same thing, it allows for more efficient heat transfer between pan and food by being highly conductive of heat and filling in the gaps between food surface and pan surface.

    • @crusader8102
      @crusader8102 Год назад +2

      thanks for finally explaining what the cpu paste does lol

    • @ZacklFair
      @ZacklFair Год назад +2

      What if I put oil on my CPU, and thermal paste into the pan? Will the world explode?

    • @intelchip_x86
      @intelchip_x86 Год назад

      @@ZacklFair DUDE!!!!
      please, dont do this or else the worlw will END!!!!!!

    • @biasneeze
      @biasneeze 7 месяцев назад

      @@ZacklFair your food will taste odd

  • @cf9496
    @cf9496 Год назад

    loved this video. it was very interesting! thanks so much for making all these cool videos

  • @erikharrison
    @erikharrison 2 года назад +37

    Lots of veggies have enzymatic reactions under moderate heat that convert starches to sugars (this is why roasted sweet potatoes are so incredibly sweet, but raw they're much milder). I suspect that is part of why veggies actually do okay in the oven without oil - enzymatic actions provide sugar for browning.
    Similarly, the relatively low energy density for a 350 degree cube of air in an oven (vs a 350 degree chunk of metal on a stovetop) gives veggies the opportunity to become tender before enough moisture is evaporated away to allow browning where it touches the pan.
    I once roasted some cut up fingerling potatoes without oil - the color was actually fantastic, a quick glance wouldn't tell you at all that they had been dry roasted. The texture was bizarre. The exteriors desiccated, becoming dry and slightly leathery, and each potato puffed up where steam tried to escape that touch exterior without being able to - oil not only keeps the exteriors pliable, the speed with which the outside cooks causes it to split in some places for steam to escape. Not so in the dry roasted potatoes. A little hotsauce to moisten the outsides and they were quite good

    • @quintessenceSL
      @quintessenceSL 2 года назад

      The next comparison would be air frying (thin coat of oil and pretty even thermal conductivity from the air).

    • @neoasura
      @neoasura 2 года назад

      @@quintessenceSL Yes, I always drizzle a coat of some sort of oil half way through my air frying sessions, it makes everything taste much better.

    • @Daria-rk6qc
      @Daria-rk6qc 2 года назад

      ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 💜 NUDE.SNAPGIRLS.TODAY/barbie 💜 PRIVATE S*X
      LET'S MAKE LOVE HONEY 💜
      #ライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!#この日のライブ配信は、#かならりやばかったですね!1#万人を超える人が見ていたもんね(笑)#やっぱり人参最高!#まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもドキドキでした!#今後は気を付けないとね5). .
      !💖🖤❤#今後は気をライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!#この日のライブ配信は、#1万人を超える人が見ていたも ん(#笑)#やっぱり人参最高!#まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもドキドキでした #今後は気をライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!( #笑)#垃圾

  • @chukyuniqul
    @chukyuniqul 2 года назад +16

    Adam, I really appreciate your videos even when I basically learn nothing new. Thank you for your hard work and consistency!

    • @Daria-rk6qc
      @Daria-rk6qc 2 года назад

      ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 💜 NUDE.SNAPGIRLS.TODAY/barbie 💜 PRIVATE S*X
      LET'S MAKE LOVE HONEY 💜
      #ライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!#この日のライブ配信は、#かならりやばかったですね!1#万人を超える人が見ていたもんね(笑)#やっぱり人参最高!#まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもドキドキでした!#今後は気を付けないとね5). .
      !💖🖤❤#今後は気をライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!#この日のライブ配信は、#1万人を超える人が見ていたも ん(#笑)#やっぱり人参最高!#まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもドキドキでした #今後は気をライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!( #笑)#垃圾

  • @DwarfDragonwulf
    @DwarfDragonwulf 10 месяцев назад +3

    This was very interesting. I usually cook beef in the oven with no oil and it comes out beautiful, so that part didn't surprise me. But it did surprise me to see how much difference it made to the vegetables in the oven, and to the stove cooking.

    • @smokeyfish7435
      @smokeyfish7435 7 месяцев назад

      Beef has lots of natural oil in it in the form of fat, essentially creates the same effect.

  • @Regulareverydaynormalguy1
    @Regulareverydaynormalguy1 2 года назад

    Dude I just discovered your channel and it's so good!

  • @AshtonTheMelon
    @AshtonTheMelon 2 года назад +76

    The oven may have to do with consistent heat surrounding the meat in a layered effect naturally. Where the stove is using the pan base as a fulcrum, the oven gets hot all around.

    • @Corrodias
      @Corrodias 2 года назад +1

      Indeed, with the food just sitting there and not being moved around, the thermal interface aspect plays less of a role, except on the bottom of the food where it's touching the pan, as seen on the vegetables. It presumably helps keep the skin from "drying out", as well.

    • @kidpoji
      @kidpoji 2 года назад +1

      Precisely

  • @zacharyniblick3942
    @zacharyniblick3942 2 года назад +5

    It is blowing my mind seeing one of my favorite creators wearing a Weigel's shirt. Grew up in Knoxville and moved away years ago, and this is such a nice slice of home. Hope you're enjoying East Tennessee, Adam!

  • @colleenwilliams1689
    @colleenwilliams1689 Год назад +8

    When I was in my college dorm we had to check out kitchen supplies from the front desk. It was surprising to see how much I was forgetting when I couldn't just reach into cabinets for what I needed! Oil being one of them (turns out I should have gone to the store beforehand to prep for this one sweet potato I wanted to cook). Took like an hour to cook the dang thing and it still wasn't done. If only I had learned about microwaving baked potatoes before moving out of the dorm.
    That was the second time I cooked in the dorm. The first time I did, I just wanted to make spaghetti. Forgot salt and a colandar. And the pot I checked out was too small and I BURNED THE PASTA IN THE POT OF WATER. I was dumbfounded.

    • @808enco6
      @808enco6 Год назад

      First time I lived alone, I missed paper towels 😓

  • @abdullahkhalid9581
    @abdullahkhalid9581 Год назад

    Wow, This is informative. Thanks for upload!

  • @dodgechallenger8877
    @dodgechallenger8877 2 года назад +30

    10:35 "oil wouldn't make big of a difference in oven as i woulve guessed. Why I'm not entirely sure"
    The first thing we need to understand is how oven works. Oven uses air to transfer the heat. Hot air is channelled through the oven with help of fan. What we need to understand is air is a fluid just like water and oil. What happes in oven is basically the same what happens when you boil or deepfry your food. Hence you can not absorve much difference in cooking but there is definitely alteration in sear pattern.
    Food coated in oil and contact with pan are well seared and foods not coated in oil aren't. Explanations for this sear behaviour is due to the surface tension between food and the oil in contact with the hot pan has been mentioned in my comment about why foods do not stick to pan. Check that out too.

  • @imperialspence5106
    @imperialspence5106 2 года назад +3

    Love The Food Lab I have a physical copy and the recipes are awesome. I love how Kenji explains the science of everything too. He's probably my favorite chef.

  • @dtvproductions3706
    @dtvproductions3706 Год назад

    These videos are so awesome and informative.

  • @gunGrief
    @gunGrief Месяц назад

    such an informative and concise video. well done.

  • @Neuralatrophy
    @Neuralatrophy 2 года назад +29

    My take on it, heat in the oven is relatively omnipresent, it surrounds the food and heats evenly from all sides, a little oil on the sheet helps on the unexposed sides, so oil or turn regularly. In the pan, heat comes directly from the bottom.