Using a wooden spoon to prevent pots from boiling over?

Using a wooden spoon to prevent pots from boiling over? - From above unrecognizable woman in gray sweater sitting at wooden table with food in bowl and creating document while working on remote project at home

Someone recently told me that placing a wooden spoon across the top of a pot will prevent boilovers.

Could somebody explain to me why this is the case?



Best Answer

There is an excellent answer to this question on the Physics SE: https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/31029/how-can-a-wooden-spoon-be-used-to-prevent-water-from-over-boiling

I will summarise what I think is the most cogent part here.

This does work up to a point. The bubbles formed by boiling water are filled with steam, so if anything colder than the steam (ie <100°C) touches a bubble the steam will immediately condense and the bubble will collapse.

Therefore provided the surface of your spoon is cold, it will help to prevent boiling over. If it's a long boil and the spoon heats up to 100°C it will no longer work. This is why a wooden spoon is recommended: metal would heat up too quickly.




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Stop a pot from boiling over with this wooden spoon trick




More answers regarding using a wooden spoon to prevent pots from boiling over?

Answer 2

Could be the explanation is related to the chemist's trick of adding rough ceramic chips (boiling stones) to water to induce even boiling. The chips provide a high surface area and release absorbed air bubbles, which helps to nucleate the formation of bubbles of steam. A wooden spoon, being porous, might work the same way.

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