As a materials engineer, my job is to understand how the structure and composition of materials change how hard or strong things are. Mostly I deal with traditional engineering materials like metals and polymers, but sometimes I get to study my favourite type of material - food.
Food is actually an engineered structure, consisting of water, proteins, carbohydrates and fats that each undergo a series of changes during mixing, whipping and cooking to create a product with the desired properties and hopefully taste.
Those engineering skills came in useful this week when faced with the important question: Why, when you leave them out do biscuits go soft, but cakes go hard?
Many people think that because stale cakes feels dry, the staling must be caused by a loss of moisture. However, a simple science experiment using bread carried out by Jean Baptiste Boussingault back in the 19th century showed that even when hermetically sealed so no water was lost through evaporation, the bread still went stale over time.
This is because the secret to staling is not due to the lost moisture content but due to the organisation of the starch molecules in the flour. In its natural state, starch is a water insoluble crystalline granule with a rigid and repeating structure. However, when heated up past the gelatinisation temperature, which occurs during baking, the crystalline granules change their structure so they can absorb nearby liquid molecules and form amorphous swollen starch molecules. These swollen granules are soft and hydrated, which is why your freshly baked cake feels squishy and moist. When cooled, the starch starts a process of recrystallisation, where the molecules begin to transform back to their more ordered crystalline structure through a process called retrogradation. The more starch that is transformed, the harder and drier the cake will feel.