Why is my stock jelly-like when cold but watery when hot?
I made a chili with home-made stock that appeared to have plenty of gelatin in it as the chili wobbled like a jelly when defrosted but when I subsequently heated it the sauce was very watery.
Is this a case of simply not reducing my sauce enough when I originally made it (despite its jellyness) or is something else going on?
Best Answer
This sounds right - if you used bones and connective tissue when making it, the collagen would become gelatin in your stock. When properly reduced (which you did), the stock should set in the fridge into a jelly. If you didn't reduce enough, there'd be too much water remaining.
Pictures about "Why is my stock jelly-like when cold but watery when hot?"
Check Low Sperm Count at Home / 11 Symptoms of Male Infertility
More answers regarding why is my stock jelly-like when cold but watery when hot?
Answer 2
The properties of gelatin are that it gels when it cools and turns liquid above 90F (32C). There's nothing wrong, it's supposed to do that. The melted gelatin has a silky mouth feel which many consider desirable.
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Images: energepic.com, Engin Akyurt, Adrien Olichon, Andrea Piacquadio