Popcorn

WillyBWright

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Joined
Dec 29, 2003
Messages
8,200
INDIANAPOLIS - Eat your way to the bottom of almost any bag of popcorn and there they are: the rock-hard, jaw-rattling unpopped kernels known as old maids.<br /><br />The nuisance kernels have kept many a dentist busy, but their days could be numbered: Scientists say they now know why some popcorn kernels resist popping into puffy white globes. <br /><br />It's long been known that popcorn kernels must have a precise moisture level in their starchy center — about 15 percent — to explode. But Purdue University researchers found the key to a kernel's explosive success lies in the composition of its hull. <br /><br />Unpopped kernels, it turns out, have leaky hulls that prevent the moisture pressure buildup needed for them to pop and lack the optimal hull structure that allows most kernels to explode. <br /><br />"They're sort of like little pressure vessels that explode when the pressure reaches a certain point," said Bruce Hamaker, a Purdue professor of food chemistry. "But if too much moisture escapes, it loses its ability to pop and just sits there." <br /><br />The findings may help popcorn breeders select the best varieties — or create new ones — with superior hulls that yield few, if any, unpopped kernels. But for now, there's no way to screen out potential old maids before they end up in bags of popcorn. <br /><br />Hamaker and his associates compared the microwave popping performance of 14 Indiana-grown popcorn varieties and examined the crystalline structure of the translucent hulls of both the popped kernels and the duds. <br /><br />In the varieties popped, the percentage of unpopped kernels ranged from 4 percent in premium brands to 47 percent in the cheaper ones. <br /><br />The findings could be good news for people who savor the snack and those who grow the 17 billion quarts of popcorn sold each year in the United States. <br /><br />Wendy Boersema Rappel, a spokeswoman for the Chicago-based Popcorn Board, said popcorn processors are always looking for ways to improve their product, including reducing the number of old maids. <br /><br />"It's one of life's annoyances — it's not rocking anyone's world, but our members always like to improve their product," Rappel said. <br /><br />Hamaker said two popcorn manufacturers have already expressed interest in Purdue's findings. <br /><br />The research, funded by Purdue's Whistler Center for Carbohydrate Research, which Hamaker directs, has been published online and will appear in the July 11 edition of the journal BioMacromolecules.<br /><br /> :rolleyes: I guess I'll finally be able to get some sleep now. :rolleyes: <br /> :rolleyes: Did any of you say the same thing I did? "DUH!" :rolleyes:
 

Bob_VT

Moderator & Unofficial iBoats Historian
Staff member
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May 19, 2001
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26,034
Re: Popcorn

Thank you!<br />Now my life is complete!
 

Link

Rear Admiral
Joined
Apr 13, 2003
Messages
4,221
Re: Popcorn

And I thought I'd never get the answer to that! :D
 

BoatBuoy

Rear Admiral
Joined
May 29, 2004
Messages
4,856
Re: Popcorn

My son's a dentist so I'm against it, it's poppy-****. Long live the old maids.
 

NathanY

Commander
Joined
Mar 16, 2002
Messages
2,408
Re: Popcorn

Great, more scientifically engineered food pumped up with more chemicals. That's all we need. :rolleyes:
 

demsvmejm

Master Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Jul 4, 2004
Messages
831
Re: Popcorn

And where did Purdue's Whistler Center for Carbohydrate Research get the money for the research? And did we really need confirmation of what we already knew?<br />Can't wait to buy my next case of popcorn, hopefully the bio-engineered kernels are in there, yummmmm!
 

jtexas

Fleet Admiral
Joined
Oct 13, 2003
Messages
8,646
Re: Popcorn

You mean they got a whole magazine dedicated to BioMacromolecules? Why didn't somebody tell me this before? Now my life is complete! ;)
 

kenimpzoom

Rear Admiral
Joined
Jul 13, 2002
Messages
4,807
Re: Popcorn

Too bad old Redenbacher keeled over before this was discovered. :( <br /><br />Ken
 
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