harmony wrote:Myth: Alcohol Bakes Off in the Oven
False. You won't be drunk after eating one piece of Aunt Jean's rum cake, but there is still some alcohol in it. Alcohol has a lower boiling point than water, which is why people think it disappears in sauces and baked goods. But when you simmer a sauce containing wine or liquor, up to 50 percent of the alcohol can remain, says Robert Wolke, professor emeritus of chemistry at the University of Pittsburgh and the author of What Einstein Told His Cook: Kitchen Science Explained ($45, amazon.com). The percentage depends on how long it simmers and other factors, like the size of the pan. When you’re baking a cake, the evaporated alcohol has to work its way out of the batter, so even less will “burn off” than in an open pan. Wolke also points out that rum is added for moisture as well as flavor. If it evaporated completely, you’d be left with a cake that wouldn’t be as moist as it should be.
link: http://www.realsimple.com/food-recipes/ ... page3.html
There ya go. The alcohol does not cook or bake out. Likely doesn't fry out either.
Personally, I like beer battered stuff, as long as the batter isn't too thick. I'm not a fan of beer/cheese soup, though.
Thanks harmony! This is good news.
