How Does JumpStart Cooking Episode 26: The Myth of the Exploding Potato Work?

When you bake a potato wrapped tightly in foil, steam gets trapped inside and builds up enough pressure to turn the potato into a tiny, edible cannonball.

Imagine a crowded elevator where everyone is shivering and sweating. The heat makes people move around more, bumping into each other harder. Now picture that potato as one of those sweaty people inside a foil tent. As it bakes, water turns into steam, which is just invisible gas trying to expand. If the foil is sealed too tight, the steam has nowhere to go. It pushes against the edges, getting stronger and stronger until pop! The skin splits or the whole thing bursts open like a popcorn kernel that forgot its place in the pot.

Why Foil Causes the Boom

The myth says any baked potato explodes, but it is really about how we wrap them. When you leave the foil loose, the steam sneaks out through the cracks, like letting air escape from a squished balloon so it does not snap back violently. But when the foil is crimped tight, it acts like a pressure cooker lid that refuses to budge. The internal pressure rises past what the potato skin can handle, leading to an explosive exit.

To prevent this kitchen disaster, you have two simple choices. You can pierce holes in the foil before baking to give the steam a VIP escape route. Or, you can just unwrap the potato for the last few minutes of cooking time. This lets the surface dry out slightly and releases the built-up tension. It is not magic; it is just physics playing hide and seek with your lunch!

Wrapping StyleResult
Tight FoilHigh Pressure (Explosion Risk)
Loose FoilSteam Escapes (Safe)

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Examples

  1. A potato is like a tiny steam boiler where the skin acts as a lid.
  2. Steam builds up inside until it pops the lid off with a loud bang.
  3. Poking holes lets the steam escape safely so the potato stays whole.

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