Go Figure - How Popcorn Pops
Popcorn PoppedPopcorn is a
tasty addition to any
movie night but it's also an example of some pretty cool science. Check it out!
Popcorn Before It's Popcorn How Popcorn Pops - The Wet Truth
Although popcorn kernals may look
totally dry, each kernel of popcorn actually has a tiny amount of
water inside it. This water is stored inside a circle of
soft starch inside the kernel's hard outer surface. As the kernel
heats up, the water's molecules start to move faster and get farther away from each other; this molecular expansion is the same reason water
turns into steam when you boil it. As the water expands it puts
pressure against the hard starch. Something's gotta give - so eventually the water pressure wins out and the
popcorn ruptures. The soft starch inside becomes inflated and bursts, flipping the kernel
inside out to release the steam inside! Mmmm, popcorn!
Popcorn - Did U Know?
Don't freeze popcorn or keep it in the fridge. This dries out your kernels and without moisture there won't be any poppin'.
Those kernels you find at the bottom of the bowl that failed to pop are called old maids. They were too dry to have any pop left in them.
The English colonists were introduced to popcorn at the first Thanksgiving feast in 1621 when Quadequina, brother of Wampanoag chief Massasoit, brought a deerskin bag of popped popcorn to dinner as a gift.
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Read more: The Lab