Ube Powder Ubwali Uchiki Kuri Squash Uchiwa Uda Seeds Ude -- Louis Eustache Udon Noodles Ufa Ngaiwa Ufa Woyera Ugba Ugiri Ugli Fruit Ugni Ugu Ugu Leaves Ugwu UHT Pasteurization Ukama Potatoes Ukazi Ukazi Soup Ukpaka Ukpo Ukpo Ukrainian Comrades Beans Ukwa Ulla Potatoes Ulster Chieftan Potatoes Ulster Emblem Potatoes Ulster Fry Ulster Prince Potatoes Ulster Roll Ulster Sceptre Potatoes Ulster Seedling Ulster Tara Potatoes Ultra Blue Potatoes Previous | Next | Maillard Reaction© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforcedMaillard Reaction is a term used to describe what happens when, under the influence of enough heat, sugars react with proteins and amino acids. When it occurs in food, it gives a flavour and colour to foods. It occurs with simple sugars -- fructose, lactose, and one form of glucose. Maillard enthusiasts refer to these as "carbonyls." An amino acid called "lysine" is particularly likely to react with sugars. One reason for dredging meat is that starches such as flour will break down in the presence of enough heat into simple sugars, providing material for a Maillard Reaction. For it to occur, water cannot be present, because water lowers the highest temperature that is possible. A Maillard Reaction starts at about 50 C (122 F), but goes through 3 stages, with the final browning stage only kicking in at 154°C (309 F.) Meat in boiling water won't get hotter than the boiling point of water, 100 C / 212 F, which is why boiled meat doesn't brown. Oil will get hotter though than 154°C (309 F), which is why meat fried in oil is able to brown, Even though roasted meat still has water actually inside it, the surface of the meat loses its water through evaporation, enabling a Maillard Reaction to occur on the surface. A Maillard Reaction is not the same as Caramelization; Caramelization is just sugar on its own breaking down. A Maillard Reaction gives a more complex flavour than Caramelization, because more compounds are required for it to occur. Additional colouring of the meat may be caused by plain old "charring" of the meat.
Also called: Maillard-Reaktion (German)
See Also:Caramelization, DredgingOther entries for: Technical TermsAccolade, Acetic Acid, Air-Layered, Alliumophobia, Alpha Amylase, Alum, Alveograph, Ascorbic Acid, Best Before Dates, Biologique, Butyric Acid, Carbonic Acid, Carnauba Wax, Chocolate Bloom, Collops, Cracker Barrel, Cucina Casalinga, Cultivar, Deipnophobia, Dioecious Plants, Du Jour, Dunking, Etiolation, EU Designations, F1, Firkin, Free-Range Chickens, Free-Range Total Freedom, French Revolutionary Calendar, Gastrique, Gâte-sauce, Gomme Arabique, Hybrid, Invaiatura, Kosher, Lachanophobia, Lime (Chemical), Listeria, Lye, Mageirocophobia, Maillard Reaction, Open Pollinated, Ostraconophobia, Oxalic Acid, Pack Date, Pavé, Phosphoric Acid, Plant Variety Protection, Pome, Potassium Nitrite, Potluck Suppers, Punnet, Quinine, Rifilature, Scald (Fruit), Sell-By Dates, Sodium Nitrite, Stufatura, Sunday Roast, Traditional Free-Range, Turophile, Use-By Dates, Yatai, Ye Shi, Yearling, Yuuki |
|

