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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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"Bill" > wrote in message
... > > I have to say that boiling unopened cans is way > > past my personal risk threshold. No criticism > > of those who do it; just a different point of view. > This was a hot topic of discussion amongst a group > of avid cooks that included several engineers. The > consensus was that as long as it was allowed to cook > completely before opening the pressure cooker method > was completely safe and that if care is taken the water > bath method is safe. > > The water bath method was deemed safe as long as the > cans were kept completely covered with water and the > cooking held to a simmer. The condensed milk inside the > cans has a higher boiling point than the water around them > and as such will never reach boiling point. As such the worst > that could happen is that a rare can might burst but would > never explode. I have done this several times and not seen > a hint of a problem. If you forget about it and the water boils > away that is a whole 'nother story. Thanks for the info -- gotta love engineers (my Dad is a retired engineer, my sister dated engineers all through college, I dated engineers, I was even married to one -- for a while, anyway ![]() While I will probably pass on making dulce de leche by boiling the can (personal risk thresholds are just that: personal), it's nice to know that it's not as risky as it feels to me. -j |
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