Cook Time vs. Cook Temp trade off

Cook Time vs. Cook Temp trade off - Focused ethnic male worker placing glass bottle at counter

So I've always thought of cooking this way:

Higher Temp & Less Cook time = crispier

vs.

Lower Temp & More Cook time = softer

Now obviously this doesn't apply to everything, but generally. Like pizza, bread, etc...

I'm confused however, because a frozen pizza I was looking at had the inverse instructions (saying if I wanted a crispier crust to increase the cook time and decrease the temp).

Have I been wrong in my thinking or are the instructions incorrect?



Best Answer

It's important to distinguish between the two different types of "crisping" that both happen in bread.

The first is the Maillard reaction which is caused by the sugars reacting with proteins; this is facilitated by high heat and low moisture, and is what actually causes the bread to turn brown (and eventually to burn).

The other is simply the evaporation of water - drying it out - which can make the bread or crust noticeably "crisper" without any browning.

The Maillard reaction happens at 154° C / 310° F, which is much higher than the boiling point of water (100° C / 212° F), so the evaporation happens first. If you put a piece of bread in the oven at a low temperature and leave it there for half an hour, it will crisp up significantly but not brown.

So essentially it depends on what kind of "crispiness" you want. High heat will cause the Maillard reaction to occur and that will crisp it up faster, but you have to shorten the cooking time, otherwise it will burn. Lower heat, on the other hand, will crisp much slower - and if the heat is too low, you won't get any browning - but you can leave it in there for much longer and the crust will keep getting drier (i.e. crispier) due to the water evaporation.

The instructions are correct. High heat causes more "crispiness" in some applications, where almost all of the crisping comes from the Maillard reaction or caramelization of some kind, but bread is an exception because of its porousness and high water content (easy for water to evaporate).




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How do you convert cooking times to different temperatures?

How to adjust cooking times for different temperatures.
  • Work out the percentage difference in temperature. Start Temperature / End Temp = % Difference. ...
  • Adjust Expected Time. Multiply initial time by the % Difference. ...
  • Add a safety margin.


  • Can I cook a pizza at 425 instead of 400?

    The best approach to baking a pizza at home is that the higher the temperature you can get, the better. Professional chefs bake pizzas even at 500 degrees Fahrenheit, but when you cook at home, the temperatures of 400, 425, 450, or 475 degrees work well.

    Does higher temperature mean crispier?

    The instructions are correct. High heat causes more "crispiness" in some applications, where almost all of the crisping comes from the Maillard reaction or caramelization of some kind, but bread is an exception because of its porousness and high water content (easy for water to evaporate).

    What is cook time in cooking?

    the time that something needs to cook.



    Time and temperature in cooking




    More answers regarding cook Time vs. Cook Temp trade off

    Answer 2

    For a frozen pizza, you want to cook it longer so that more water bakes out of the crust. If you just cooked it hotter, parts would burn before the rest was completely cooked because so much of it is frozen.

    Otherwise, lower temp and longer time also needs liquid in order to get softer (stewing or braising or just basting). Otherwise, like the pizza, it'll dry out.

    Answer 3

    I've found a similar contradiction with some brands of cook-from-frozen pizza. On closer reading of the instructions I noticed that the 'crispier' method required the pizza be placed directly on oven grille and the 'less crispy' in a pan.

    Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

    Images: Kampus Production, Madel Baylongo, Nothing Ahead, Quang Nguyen Vinh