Any kind of meat will change color while it is cooking. No matter what type of cooking method you are using.
Cooking meat results in a chemical change. Proteins in the meat are long strings of biochemical material, and heat causes them to "unravel" and break down. This is chemical change.
Yes.
No, cooking meat is an irreversible change. The high heat causes chemical changes in the meat proteins and other components, leading to the denaturation of proteins and alteration in texture, color, and flavor that cannot be undone by simply cooling or reheating the meat.
As soon as mankind learned to use fire in order to keep warm and to change the character and flavour of raw meat, man started cooking. Cooking meat would have long predated the invention of cooking utensils, since it was only necessary to hold the meat over the fire using sticks, or to place the meat under the fire.
Cooking sausage is a chemical change because the heat from cooking causes chemical reactions to occur in the sausage. These chemical reactions change the composition of the sausage, leading to the browning of the meat, alteration of flavors, and changes in texture.
You should not leave a meat thermometer in the turkey while it cooks. This is very dangerous and should be avoided.
You may mean 'bastard', and this means 'born out of wedlock, or illegitimate'. It also refers to a large, rough file.
No, cooking read meat does not effect the protein content as it is stable in this type of meat. Cooking methods however can effect the vitamin content in red meat.
A cooking term is a term used in cooking.
in slow cooking the meat has a longer cooking time in pressure cooking the meat or whatever gets more tender and tastes better.
Cooking temperature is the temperature of the oven, grill, stovetop etc while internal temperature of the meat is how hot the meat is at its center most part. Putting chicken in a four hundred degree oven for twenty minutes raises the temperature of the meat to 165°