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Nopales (for the pads) are a vegetable made from the young cladode (pad) segments of prickly pear, carefully peeled to remove the spines. These fleshy pads are flat and about hand-sized. They can be purple or green. They are particularly common in their native Mexico, where the p
Cook with Nopal
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Nopales (for the pads) are a vegetable made from the young cladode (pad) segments of prickly pear, carefully peeled to remove the spines. These fleshy pads are flat and about hand-sized. They can be purple or green. They are particularly common in their native Mexico, where the plant is eaten commonly and regularly forms part of a variety of Mexican cuisine dishes. Farmed nopales are most often of the species Opuntia ficus-indica, although the pads of almost all Opuntia species are edible. Nopales are generally sold fresh in Mexico. In more recent years bottled, or canned versions are available mostly for export. Less often dried versions are available. Used to prepare nopalitos, they have a light, slightly tart flavor, like green beans, and a crisp, mucilaginous texture. In most recipes the mucilaginous liquid they contain is included in the cooking. They are at their most tender and juicy in the spring. Nopales are most commonly used in Mexican cuisine in dishes such as huevos con nopales, carne con nopales (meat with nopal), tacos de nopales, or simply on their own or in salads with queso panela (panela cheese). Candied nopale is called acitróne. Nopales have also grown to be an important ingredient in New Mexican cuisine and in Tejano culture (Texas).
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What science says
compound effect
“The presence of oil-soluble monopalmitin increases the viscous character of fresh emulsions and substantially reduces the modulus of heat-set emulsion gels.”
oil-soluble monopalmitin→increases→viscous character of fresh emulsions
“The presence of oil-soluble monopalmitin increases the viscous character of fresh emulsions and substantially reduces the modulus of heat-set emulsion gels.”
oil-soluble monopalmitin→reduces→modulus of heat-set emulsion gels
“The viscoelastic properties of heat-set emulsion gels containing monopalmitin are only slightly frequency-dependent, and these gels can be classified as 'strong gels'.”
monopalmitin→affects→viscoelastic properties of heat-set emulsion gels
“the crystallization of the high-melting fraction with 10G1M, 10G1P, and 10G1S exhibited only wide-angle SR-XRD patterns without small-angle SR-XRD patterns, indicating that these crystals formed thin films in the nanometer-size emulsion droplets that did not diffract small-angle SR-XRD patterns.”
decaglycerin monomyristate (10G1M), decaglycerin monopalmitate (10G1P), decaglycerin monostearate (10G1S)→forms→thin films in nanometer-size emulsion droplets