“The chemistry of rice. Come.” She pulled out a whiteboard.
“Cooking rice is a hydrolysis reaction – water molecules break starch chains with heat. Too little water, reaction stops early → crunchy rice. Too much water, starch leaches out → porridge.”
I’ll assume you meant (a very practical, helpful topic). Here’s a short, instructive story. Title: The Secret Formula of Non-Sticky Rice quimica di risio
“Why wash rice?” she asked. “To clean it?” “Partly. But the real reason: water removes surface starch dust. That dust is pure amylopectin. Leave it on, and you get glue.” She had him wash Arborio rice until the water ran clear. “Now you’ve removed the sticky troublemakers.”
Cooking isn’t magic – it’s molecular engineering. Understand the quimica di risio , and you’ll never fear the pot again. If you actually meant "chemistry of laughter" (riso = laugh in Italian), let me know and I’ll write that version instead! “The chemistry of rice
She wrote the formula on the board: Plus: lid on → traps steam → even heating.
Luca lifted the lid. Fluffy, separate grains. Perfect. Too little water, reaction stops early → crunchy rice
Luca loved cooking, but rice was his enemy. Every time he made it, the result was either a sticky, gluey blob or a hard, crunchy disaster.