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Duration:05:08
Uploaded:2016-11-14
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MLA Full: "Why Baking Powder and Baking Soda are NOT the Same." YouTube, uploaded by SciShow, 14 November 2016, www.youtube.com/watch?v=GXRouroc_ZY.
MLA Inline: (SciShow, 2016)
APA Full: SciShow. (2016, November 14). Why Baking Powder and Baking Soda are NOT the Same [Video]. YouTube. https://youtube.com/watch?v=GXRouroc_ZY
APA Inline: (SciShow, 2016)
Chicago Full: SciShow, "Why Baking Powder and Baking Soda are NOT the Same.", November 14, 2016, YouTube, 05:08,
https://youtube.com/watch?v=GXRouroc_ZY.
When baking, cooking, or doing science experiments, it is essential to remember that baking powder is NOT the same thing as baking soda. So why do they both exist? What makes them different, and what can go wrong if you mix them up? Join Hank Green for an informative new episode of SciShow that might just save your next batch of cupcakes!

Learn more about sourdough: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ug5RlajQ7Ds

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Sources:
https://news.ncsu.edu/2014/05/baking-soda-powder/
http://www.seriouseats.com/2015/12/cookie-science-baking-powder.html
https://www.acs.org/content/acs/en/education/whatischemistry/landmarks/bakingpowder.html
https://www.britannica.com/science/tartaric-acid
http://www.epicurious.com/ingredients/why-aluminum-free-baking-powder-is-better-article
http://www.ansac.com/products/about-soda-ash/
https://www.google.com/patents/US2532281

Image Sources:
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Fucus_serratus2.jpg
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Salt_shaker_on_white_background.jpg
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Eben_Norton_Horsford.jpg
If you've ever made one of those paper mache volcanoes, you know that household acids, like vinegar, and basis, like baking soda, react to produce gases, that bubbly lava. But did you know that a similar chemical reaction is what makes cakes and biscuits fluffy. 

If you see a recipe call for baking soda, or baking powder that's what's helping your tasty baked goods rise. Baking soda and baking powder are just made up of slightly different compounds, which can effect the chemistry of your cooking. 

Back before grocery stores and fancy cake recipes, if you wanted to make your bread rise you needed leavening agents from natural sources, and by that I mean bakers would lave their dough sitting out so that wild yeast from the air could move in. The yeasts digest sugars in the flour and make chemicals like carbon dioxide through a process called fermentation. All that carbon dioxide gas makes the dough slowly rise and create fluffy loaves of bread.

Eventually,  people started learning to save some of their raw dough, or some of the flour-water-microbe goop, to kickstart the process next time. We still use this method to make sourdough bread today, and without yeast bread just doesn't have the texture and flavour we're used to. But around the 1830s, bakers figured out that they could create a quick chemical reaction themselves so they didn't have to wait for the yeast to do its thing. That way other baked goods like cakes, and biscuits could be lighter and fluffier.

So bakers started using chemical leavening agents, like baking soda which if we were to use the actual chemical name we would just call it sodium bicarbonate. It's made from soda ash, which at the time came from the ashes of sodium rich marine plants, like seaweeds, or it was made synthetically by reacting table salt, also known as sodium chloride, with other chemicals and minerals.

Today the chemicals needed to produce soda ash and baking soda also come from mines. So, the baking soda you find on supermarket shelves is the same compound that we've been using for almost two centuries. Usually bakers would mix sodium bicarbonate and sour milk, which is full of lactic acid, and the reaction would produce bubbles of carbon dioxide, like the erupting in a science fair volcano. Those gas bubbles can puff up bread dough or cake batter but the acidity of sour milk isn't all that consistent, so neither were these reactions or their final baked goods. 

The next leap forward in baking technology was in the 1840s with cream of tartar, also known as potassium hydrogen tartrate or potassium bitartrate. It's an acidic byproduct of wine fermentation and when you mix it with sodium bicarbonate and some water  you get carbon dioxide bubbles. Cream of tartar helped make the chemical reactions in baking more consistent but there was one big downside, the availability and price of varied depending on the grape harvest in a given year.

For a while, sodium bicarbonate and cream of tartar were sold in twin packets which you added to the wet ingredients when you were ready to set off the reaction and stick your batter in the oven. This worked fine for bakers but the supply of cream of tartar still wasn't consistent.

Enter the chemist Eben Horsford, who figured out how to make an acid called monocalcium phosphate from beef bones in 1856. Like the cream of tartar reaction, when you mix monocalcium phosphate, baking soda and water you get carbon dioxide bubbles. So, Horsford mixed monocalcium phosphate and sodium bicarbonate together and added some cornstarch to keep everything dry, and prevent early reactions. He marketed this concoction as Horsford's Bread Preparation, and voila, baking powder was born.

During 1880s, people realized they can extract monocalcium phosphate from mines instead, no beef bones required. And nowadays, most of the baking powder you find in the grocery store is labeled double-acting. Like the name suggests, the sodium bicarbonate in double-acting baking powder reacts twice, once within an acid when wet ingredients are added and then with a second acid because of the heat of the oven. That way your dough keeps rising while it's baking, and you get a fluffier product. 

However, some of these heat-activated acids can contain aluminum. Some people avoid double-acting baking powder because they're worried about the health effects of aluminum. Although the CDC says the amount of people consume in food isn't enough to be dangerous. Either way other double-acting baking powders are aluminum free and use compounds like sodium acid pyrophosphate instead. 

So, there you have it. Baking soda is just another name for sodium bicarbonate, while baking powder is sodium bicarbonate and an acid or two and some cornstarch. An all-in-one chemical concoction just waiting for moisture and heat to get the reactions going. You can't substitute baking soda for baking powder unless your recipe also includes an acid, something like like buttermilk, vinegar or cream of tartar. So next time you bake a batch of chocolate chip cookies, remember to thank chemistry for that fluffy, chewy goodness.

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