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  4. Why does my cooking sometimes smell like cat poo?
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Why does my cooking sometimes smell like cat poo?

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Offline John Chapman (OP)

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Why does my cooking sometimes smell like cat poo?
« Reply #20 on: 07/03/2009 21:07:44 »
Thanks fishytails

So now that you've established that my microwave oven is rancid with rotten old food, what about the second part of my question:

Why does adding other vegetables to the mix (and I have recently found that it's the peppers that do it) deodorise the smelly veg?
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Offline Chemistry4me

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Why does my cooking sometimes smell like cat poo?
« Reply #21 on: 07/03/2009 21:52:40 »
It neutralises the sulphur compounds?
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Offline John Chapman (OP)

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Why does my cooking sometimes smell like cat poo?
« Reply #22 on: 07/03/2009 21:54:22 »
Aha! That sounds interesting. How's that work, then?
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Offline Chemistry4me

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Why does my cooking sometimes smell like cat poo?
« Reply #23 on: 07/03/2009 22:05:26 »
Well, do you believe this?

Quote
A piece of charcoal in the pot will neutralize the odor given out by the cabbage, boiled in the ordinary way.

http://chestofbooks.com/food/recipes/Clayton-Quaker-Cook-Book/Vegetables.html
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Offline John Chapman (OP)

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Why does my cooking sometimes smell like cat poo?
« Reply #24 on: 07/03/2009 22:35:23 »
Charcoal in the pot with the vegetables? Wow. I'd like to try that.

I once had the mechanism of the deodorizing power of charcoal pegged as a question for this forum. But I'd forgotten all about it. So...

How's that work, then? And can the mechanism transfer to peppers?

Any ideas, Chem?
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Offline Chemistry4me

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Why does my cooking sometimes smell like cat poo?
« Reply #25 on: 07/03/2009 22:42:32 »
Charcoal absorbs things like a sponge.
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Offline Chemistry4me

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Why does my cooking sometimes smell like cat poo?
« Reply #26 on: 07/03/2009 22:43:56 »
Quote
One teaspoon of charcoal has a surface area of more than 10,000 square feet.

www.oehc.ca/activated-charcoal.rtf
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Offline John Chapman (OP)

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Why does my cooking sometimes smell like cat poo?
« Reply #27 on: 07/03/2009 23:51:23 »
That is quite interesting although the evidence isn't supported very scientifically and it doesn't explain the mechanism. I wonder if that's true about one teaspoon having a surface area of more than 10,000 square feet.

Still, it doesn't explain how peppers absorb the smell. I suspect they may in some way be neutralising or counteracting the smell rather than absorbing it. Chemistry rather than physics.
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Offline DrN

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Why does my cooking sometimes smell like cat poo?
« Reply #28 on: 07/03/2009 23:55:19 »
I'm still confused as to why the veg would smell differently when steamed in the microwave than when steamed over a pan. I assume they taste the same? I generally only microwave-steam potatoes, broccoli and green beans, and I've never tried it with frozen veg, or even pre-packed pre-prepared veg, so perhaps I'm missing out?

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Offline John Chapman (OP)

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Why does my cooking sometimes smell like cat poo?
« Reply #29 on: 08/03/2009 00:06:49 »
I've just wiki'd activated charcoal and, in a nutshell, it says that charcoal absorbant properties work using Van der Waals forces throughout it's incredibly large surface area. It says that "one gram of activated carbon has a surface area of approximately 500 m²". I can't be arsed calculating a direct comparison with the "one teaspoonful & 10,000 square feet" that Chem4Me found but, if anything, the wiki reference sounds even bigger.
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Offline John Chapman (OP)

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Why does my cooking sometimes smell like cat poo?
« Reply #30 on: 08/03/2009 00:08:49 »
Hi fishytails

Sorry if that's not clear. The smell is exactly the same regardless of how it is cooked. Now I understand why you suggested it might be caused by old food in an unclean microwave.
« Last Edit: 08/03/2009 00:10:26 by John Chapman »
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