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Carbohydrates in Cooking
Carbohydrates in Cooking
Carbohydrates — built from carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen — serve two purposes in the biological world: energy storage (sugars and starch) and structural support (cellulose, pectin). The cook encounters them at every scale, from the sweetness of a single glucose molecule to the indigestible fiber of a celery stalk. The remarkable fact is that the same glucose monomer, connected by different chemical linkages, produces substances with opposite cooking behavior — soluble starch that thickens sauces and insoluble cellulose that resists hours of boiling.