Darker color and chewy texture happen when something gets cooked longer or has more moisture inside.
Imagine baking a cake, if you take it out of the oven too soon, it’s light and soft. But if you leave it in longer, it becomes darker on the outside and chewier inside, like how your favorite cookies get when they’re done just right!
Why it gets darker
When something is cooked, heat makes the color change, it's like when you leave a piece of bread in the toaster too long; it turns brown or even black. The longer it stays hot, the more color it gains.
Why it gets chewy
Chewy means there’s still some moisture inside, even after cooking. Think about a marshmallow, it's squishy and soft because it holds onto all that gooey stuff inside. If you cook something just right, it keeps that squishiness and becomes chewy instead of dry or hard.
So, darker color and chewy texture are like the perfect balance between heat and moisture, just like your favorite snack!
Examples
- A banana turning brown and getting softer as it ripens
- A loaf of bread becoming darker and chewier after baking
- A piece of meat changing color when cooked
Ask a question
See also
- What is sauce?
- Why is eating pretzels safe when they are bathed in lye?
- How Does Every Spice Explained Work?
- How Does Marvellous Madder The Colour Change Dye Work?
- How Does A Tasting of Culinary Science—Starch Work?