This happens though. You can open a can of condensed soup or cranberries and it will pour out in the shape of the can because it’s all congealed together. Canned foods are usually pasteurized in the can and have a lot of preservatives and emulsifiers so that can help “fix” the texture for long term storage.
But in those examples, they’re congealed on purpose because of the deliberate inclusion of gelatin or pectin, respectively. You buy those things because the thick consistency is what you’re looking for.
OP was talking about other sorts of foods like canned green beans or corn or something, where all they’re trying to do is preserve the vegetable and the liquid they’re packed in is watery.
This is just a wild guess (I’m not a food scientist), but maybe it’s simply that whatever fiber/cellulose in the cell walls survives the canning process is stable at room temperature indefinitely without any bacteria or fungi around to break it down?
Like soups with noodles and vegatables. Chunky, how do they get everything to not get soggy like oatmeal left too long
I wouldn’t say the vegetables and noodles in canned soup aren’t soggy. Theyre both pretty mushy.
Ya but what stops everything from, like, de-congealing into absolute slop/gruel/whatever?
This happens though. You can open a can of condensed soup or cranberries and it will pour out in the shape of the can because it’s all congealed together. Canned foods are usually pasteurized in the can and have a lot of preservatives and emulsifiers so that can help “fix” the texture for long term storage.
But in those examples, they’re congealed on purpose because of the deliberate inclusion of gelatin or pectin, respectively. You buy those things because the thick consistency is what you’re looking for.
OP was talking about other sorts of foods like canned green beans or corn or something, where all they’re trying to do is preserve the vegetable and the liquid they’re packed in is watery.
Look, at a certain point, it stops mushening. What is it that stops that from happening and it turning to just absolute like gruel or whatever?
This is just a wild guess (I’m not a food scientist), but maybe it’s simply that whatever fiber/cellulose in the cell walls survives the canning process is stable at room temperature indefinitely without any bacteria or fungi around to break it down?
This is just a wild upvote haha