Searing Meat
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Searing Meat gained popularity with a theory originally put forward by Justus von Liebig, a German chemist, in a book he published in 1847.
Von Liebig believed that he had proven that searing meat creates a "crust" on the surface of the meat which would keep juices in. Auguste Escoffier, a French food writer, believed this and wrote of it in 1902. But by the 1930s, owing to funds made available by the US Federal government, Home Economics research was well underway and studies proved the opposite: that roasting meat at a constant temperature actually caused it to lose less fluid than initially seared ones. (University of Missouri study, 1930.) By 1936, Irma Rombauer turned away from searing for the purpose of retaining juices in her "The Joy of Cooking."
In recent times, though, food writers have forgotten past learning and advocated searing meat to retain juices. Despite this, the science remains that it does not. See "On Food & Cooking: The Science and Lore of the Kitchen" by Harold McGee, Simon & Schuster, 1997, pp112 - 116.
Why you still want to sear meat sometimes, however, is because the browning does create flavour. When you come across a recipe advising you to sear the meat first to seal in the juices, know that it won't do any such thing -- but sear away anyway, because it does develop taste and visual appeal!
Literature & Lore
product is obtained, she says, when the meat is cooked without the process of searing. 'Unseared roasts should be cooked uncovered at a temperature of from 300 to 350 degrees F,' Miss Lowe says. 'If the temperature goes above 350 degrees the loss of meat juice is too great, and the oven is splattered with grease.'" -- For the Homemaker column. Milford, Iowa: The Milford Mail. 25 January 1934. Page 2.
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