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I've always heard that you should wait for water to boil before adding pasta/perogies/vegetables/etc. What is the reason for this? Is it because it reaches boiling point faster? If so, why?

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    I've noticed that throwing some food in there will cause it to boil much faster because it seems to trap a lot of the heat Commented Sep 3, 2010 at 15:08

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The primary reason is for accuracy and reliability in cooking times. Boiling water is guaranteed (not accounting for altitude) to be at 212 F (100 C). With a set temperature you can then say things like "boil X for 9 minutes" with a very high measure of confidence.

You certainly can cook things in the water as you go, but it's going to be a lot more hit-and-miss. Pasta, for example, will begin to cook before it reaches the boiling point. You would need to measure the temperature, and check the pasta regularly to determine when it was done. You can't give someone an accurate cooking time with this method either. The time it takes for water to boil will vary greatly with stove heat output, pot size & shape, and the amount of water.

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When you boil something, you want to efficiently dump heat into it to cook it. If you toss your dumplings or whatever into not yet boiling water, it's the same as just soaking it in cool water before you cook it. You can imagine pre-soaking your dumplings/pierogies would just turn the dough into nasty mush. It's the same thing with tossing them into water that isn't yet hot enough to cook them. Also, once your food is in the water, it's soaking up some of the heat, which means the water will take longer to boil. With nothing in the water, the water gets 100% of the heat from the stove, so it will boil more quickly than if you have the mass of the food floating in it. Consequently, dumping food in "30 seconds before it was going to boil" can actually result in it soaking in sub-boiling water for a lot longer than 30 seconds.

Since water doesn't get any hotter the longer you boil it, you should usually wait for it to boil, but there is usually no benefit to waiting any longer than that. Once it hits the boiling point, the heat is used for the phase change into gas. (The actual boiling) rather than increasing the temperature past the boiling point.

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It all depends on what you are cooking: for example if you are making white stock you can (and probably should) start with cold water which you bring to a quick rolling boil and then reduce to a bare simmer for a long time. If you are making soup and you just need to cook the chicken breast to add to the soup, then start with boiling water. If you are cooking legumes, then again start with cold water. For blanching vegetables, cooking rice, or pasta you should always start with boiling water to avoid the problems mentioned earlier but also avoid overcooking (vegetables) or making mushy dishes (pasta, rice). There is no way to achieve the "al dente" feeling of pasta if you start with cold water. For that matter, you also never add cold water say to rice pilaf once it starts cooking. Assume you made a mistake and need to add some water to the pot, it must be boiling hot..

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Certainly one reason is the accuracy/reliability, after all physical laws guarantee that water boiling point is around 100 C, with small adjustment for pressure/altitude, salt contents and so on.

Then, another reason is that cooking at different temperatures changes dramatically the end result. As personal anecdotal evidence, cooking pasta at lower temperatures make it feel a lot more gelatinous and "spongy", i.e. horrible.

Think also of the different result you get with boiled meat when you put it in cold water or in boiling water.

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    Poaching eggs from a cold water start would be quite a challenge. Until the water gets above Ovalbumin denaturation temperature, any convection in the pot'll turn the whites into a strandy mess. Maybe in zero gravity aboard the ISS? Commented Feb 9, 2015 at 16:17
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Lets do an energy balance of the system:

HeatIn/second = HeatStoredInFoodOrWater/second + HeatLostToSurroundings/second

As you can see, every second that the food is not in the pot, heat is being wasted.

The sooner the food goes in, the sooner it will be done.

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I'm certain that it makes a difference cooking pasta. I've tried both ways many times and notice putting them in cold water first makes them soft on the outside and hard inside. Boiling water seems to make it cook more evenly, especially for thicker pasta

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    Maybe if your stove is really slow to boil water, but I always cook pasta from cold water now - it sticks less, and doesn't harm the texture.
    – Cascabel
    Commented Aug 30, 2013 at 22:25
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When you boil things IN the water AS IT BOILS it is usually VERY easy to determine when it is done as it tends to reach the peak of perfection as soon as the water comes to a full boil. This has been especially true for me when cooking Pastas. Simply add the items you wish to boil to the water before heating, wait for it to come to a complete boil, and then test your pasta in your favorite way! Try it, I bet it works for you!

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    -1: I'm surprised this needs saying, but different foods need different amounts of cooking. If you start pasta in cold water, then bring it to a boil as fast as possible, it still won't be done. If you treat broccoli the same way, it'll be overcooked by the time it boils. I'm sure this works for something, but definitely not as a general rule.
    – Cascabel
    Commented Mar 15, 2014 at 17:51
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You might as well put the pasta in from cold because you will achieve an overall shorter waiting time. If you wait for water to boil, then you will inevitably be waiting for longer to cook your food.

I've sat with a stop watch and timed two pots of pasta, one from cold and the other from boiling. Sure, boiling water cooks food faster but waiting for water to boil takes a while and you might as well be burning the candle at both ends by throwing the pasta in first (even cold water softens pasta eventually). You can save yourself around 10 to 15 mins.

The only reason cooking instructions state "from boiling" is for an accurate constant that can be replicated.

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    Hello and welcome to the site. Please note that we do strive to find real solutions for problems while maintaining a respectful, civil and polite language. Please do not berate others or criticize them in an answer. While I applaud your approach of making a scientific test out of the question, I am convinced that the f-word is not necessary to bring your point across.
    – Stephie
    Commented Feb 9, 2015 at 15:05

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