Ch-114 Lab 2 (Kitchen Mixtures)
Whipping Cream!
For this Lab I chose to mix and make whipping cream!
1st Picture:
I was putting all the ingredients into the bowl
2nd picture:
I first started to mix ingredients in the bowl
3rd picture:
The bubbles started to go away and the mix became a little thicker
4th picture:
I believe this when I should have stopped as the mix reached a good thickness
5th picture:
I continued to mix and it started to change its form again
6th picture:
The final product of when I actually stopped
Taste Test:
Very “vanilla” tasting and had the whip cream taste
But it was very clumpy & liquidy at the same time which made it very unattractive
Kitchen Mixture & Polar molecules
Ideally, I found that whisking the mixture causes air to be included into the cream. The cream's fat molecules surround and stabilize the air bubbles. This produces a texture that is light and fluffy. An emulsion of fatty molecules floating in water is known as the heavy whipping cream which are non-polar when whipped, which means that water molecules resist them and attract each other. By whipping, the water and air molecules are effectively pushed to be connected by these fat molecules, forming a stable structure.
I would say that this activity was a success until it wasn’t. If I were to do this activity again I would definitely stop mixing once it has reached the preferred look and texture. I would also do it in a much bigger bowl because when I first started whisking, the mix started to get out of the bowl onto everything around.






Comments
Post a Comment