How to slow down evaporation when cooking?

How to slow down evaporation when cooking? - Brown and Black Turtle on Brown Wooden Table

Does water evaporate faster when rolling boil with a lid or simmer without a lid? If I use a certain stove plate with a certain sauce pan set to its lowest setting it will cause the water to roll boil with lid on and just simmer without a lid.

My question is, will the lid compensate for that water that evaporates faster (I assume?) when it is rolling boiling compared to when it just simmer?

The context is brewing tea. I have found a new tea that should be cooked for as long as possible (an hour is not too much) and I want to leave it unattended.

How to avoid too much evaporation?



Best Answer

Covering (using a lid) will greatly reduce evaporation, whether at the full boil or just simmering...or sitting on the countertop.




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Quick Answer about "How to slow down evaporation when cooking?"

With your lid off, it becomes easier for the water to evaporate away, which extracts a large amount of heat energy from the water, keeping your example pot at a simmer. Put the lid on, and you make it harder for the vapor to escape, so less heat is removed, so your pot heats up further to a rolling boil.

How do you slow down evaporation?

Cool the water down or limit its exposure to heat by keeping it in the shade, adding ice or cooling with refrigerated pipes. This lowers the kinetic energy available to the water molecules, which slows the evaporation rate.

How can you make water evaporate more slowly?

Adding energy (heating) increases the rate of evaporation This makes sense because at higher temperatures, more molecules are moving faster; therefore, it is more likely for a molecule to have enough energy to break away from the liquid to become a gas.

Does heating slow down evaporation?

Evaporation rates are higher at higher temperatures because as temperature increases, the amount of energy necessary for evaporation decreases.

How do you not lose water when boiling?

Only boil what you need\u2014don't fill up the pot if it's not necessary. You can also reuse water used for cooking by letting it cool first and watering plants with it. Switch to steaming instead of boiling vegetables. The steaming process requires much less water and still produces tasty meals.



Evaporating water on a stove top




More answers regarding how to slow down evaporation when cooking?

Answer 2

You could look at reducing the heat coming from the burner/ring, so you could leave the lid on & also reduce the boil to a simmer.

One of these flat metal simmer rings that spread the heat [$£€ 2.50 on eBay] is a cheap & easy way to reduce the heat arriving at the pan from the burner.

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Answer 3

With evaporating or boiling water, the evaporation of the water takes away an enormous amount of heat. It takes one small calorie (which is 1/1000th of a food calorie) to raise the temperature of one gram of water one degree C, but it then takes 575 calories to boil that water into vapor. In other words, if you add heat to almost-freezing water until it starts boiling, it will take almost six times as much heat energy again to completely boil the water away.

With your lid off, it becomes easier for the water to evaporate away, which extracts a large amount of heat energy from the water, keeping your example pot at a simmer. Put the lid on, and you make it harder for the vapor to escape, so less heat is removed, so your pot heats up further to a rolling boil.

But, since you're adding the same amount of heat to both pots, in both cases the pot will heat up until the heat lost per time equals the heat added. Although the majority of the heat loss in both cases will be the heat of vaporizing water, having a lid lets you have proportionally more heat loss through conduction to the surrounding air (which is why, with a glass lid, you'll see water condensing on the underside; that transfers heat to the lid, which then transfers heat to the air). So, you'll lose somewhat less water with a lid, but I'll guess there wouldn't be a large difference.

In your case, my guess is that you'll get more reliable boiling with a lid, especially a glass one where you can see the contents. And, the somewhat reduced water loss will be a bonus.

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