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Food Science: What is Cream of Tartar?

2008_12_16-CreamofTartar.jpgThis is a question that has bugged us for quite some time! What is cream of tartar? Is it natural? What does it do? And please tell us it has nothing to do with the tartar that dentists talk about...

 
 

Ok, the good news first: cream of tartar is completely unrelated to teeth. Whew!

In fact, it's an acidic by-product from the process of making wine. It's found in the sediment left behind in barrels after the wine has been fermented, and it gets purified into the powdery white substance that we use in baking.

One of the best known uses for cream of tartar is for stabilizing egg whites while whipping them. A pinch of cream of tartar added while the whites are being whipped will strengthen the matrix of bubbles and help prevent the egg foam from collapsing too quickly. The tartar also helps to increase the volume of the egg foam and keeps them bright and white.

Cream of tartar is also often added to baked products to help activate the alkaline baking soda. In fact, cream of tartar mixed with baking soda is what gives us baking powder.

One more way cream of tartar gets used in the kitchen is when we're working with sugar. Where cream of tartar is a stabilizing agent for egg whites, a pinch added to boiling sugar is actually an interfering agent. The cream of tartar gets in the way of sugar's natural tendency to bind together and prevents those dreaded sugar crystals from forming.

Some sources say that white vinegar or lemon juice can be substituted for cream of tartar, but it can get tricky since you need more vinegar to get the same acidic reaction and that amount of added liquid could cause problems with the original recipe. We think it's best to stay with the real thing and keep it stocked in the pantry!

Related: Pantry Basics: What's the Difference Between Baking Soda and Baking Powder?

(Image: Emma Christensen for the Kitchn)

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Food Science, Baking Products, Ingredients - Pantry, pantry basics, spice cupboard, cream of tartar

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Comments (8)

lame question - but does it have anything to do with tartar sauce?

posted by chusmabilly on December 16th 2008 at 12:01pm
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or steak tartar?

posted by LegsBattaglia on December 16th 2008 at 12:18pm
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Chusmabilly, tartar sauce is a mix of mayo and lemon juice with pickle relish if you like. No cream of tartar in my recipe.

Steak tartar is just raw beef chopped up and ususally served with a raw egg. ICK.

posted by Tiamat_the_Red on December 16th 2008 at 12:59pm
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it's also helpful for making home made play-doh!

posted by JennyZ on December 16th 2008 at 1:49pm
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Cream of tartar is the often-missed ingredient in lots of snickerdoodle recipes I've seen.

If you love snickerdoodles, add it back in - it gives them that distinctive, can't-put-my-finger-on-it flavor.

posted by laila on December 16th 2008 at 2:54pm
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Don't add it to sugar to make candy. The only way to avoid crystals is to get a decent thermometer and don't scrape down the sides of the pan.

"Cream of tartar is a by-product of the wine industry. A crystalline acid forms on the inside of wine barrels. The barrels are scraped and the sediment is purified and ground to form cream of tartar"

http://www.gourmetsleuth.com/equivalents_substitutions.asp?index=M&tid=486

posted by Palmetto on December 16th 2008 at 4:29pm
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Cream of tartar is also often used in natural dyeing. I believe it is a color enhancer.

posted by Eliza on December 17th 2008 at 5:28pm
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Good to know- I just made a snickerdoodle recipe where everyone advised NOT to use cream of tartar, since it gives them an "acrid" taste. I used lemon juice instead, and they were slightly disappointing.

posted by a_sanzie on December 18th 2008 at 12:11pm
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