At ~375 °F, water can be kept liquid at ~1,000 bar and would have a thermal conductivity of about 580 mW/mK.
Traditional frying oil seems to have a thermal conductivity of around 100–200 mW/mK.
I imagine that temperature and thermal conductivity are the important factors for frying. So do you think you could fry foods with hot, pressurized water?
Traditional frying oil seems to have a thermal conductivity of around 100–200 mW/mK.
I imagine that temperature and thermal conductivity are the important factors for frying. So do you think you could fry foods with hot, pressurized water?
