Wet Heat Methods (Boiling, Simmering, Poaching, Steaming)
Wet Heat Methods
Boiling, simmering, poaching, and steaming share a defining constraint: water’s boiling point (212°F/100°C at sea level) sets a hard ceiling on food temperature. This is too low for Maillard browning (~280°F) or caramelization (~330°F), which is why wet-heat-cooked foods remain pale and mild compared to their dry-heat counterparts. The tradeoff is gentleness — wet heat preserves delicate textures, retains moisture, and delivers uniform temperature with no hot spots.
Boiling
Water at a full rolling boil (212°F) with vigorous convection currents that circulate heat efficiently throughout the pot. The entire medium reaches uniform temperature quickly. Best for foods that can tolerate agitation: pasta (starch gelatinizes), vegetables (softens cellular structure), eggs (proteins denature and set).