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Carnegie Mellon University: CMU Lab Leads Development of Pasta That Morphs

Flat pasta morphs shape when cooked

Flat pasta that morphs into 3D shapes when cooked saves on packaging

Morphing Matter Lab. Carnegie Mellon University Flat-pack furniture is commonplace, and flat-pack pasta might be one day too. Wen Wang of Carnegie Mellon University in Pennsylvania and her colleagues have developed edible 2D pasta that swells into 3D shapes when cooked, such as long spirals resembling fusilli and saddle shapes similar to conchiglie. Advertisement The researchers believe that flat-pack dry pasta could drastically reduce the amount of packaging required for the foodstuff, as well as saving on storage and transportation space. For example, when macaroni is packaged, around 60 per cent of the space in the box or bag is air, estimates Wang.

CMU Lab Leads Development of Pasta That Morphs Into Shape When Cooked

Flat-Packed Noodles Create More Sustainable Packaging, Transportation and Storage Aaron Aupperlee Print A team of researchers led by the Morphing Matter Lab is developing flat pasta that forms familiar shapes when it s cooked. Their work is the cover story in this month s issue of Science Advances. People love pasta for its shapes from tubes of penne and rigatoni to spirals of fusilli and rotini. But what makes farfalle different from conchiglie also makes the staple a bear to package, requiring large bags and boxes to accommodate the iconic shapes of pastas around the world. A research team led by the Morphing Matter Lab at Carnegie Mellon University is developing flat pasta that forms into familiar shapes when cooked. The team impresses tiny grooves into flat pasta dough made of only semolina flour and water in patterns that cause it to morph into tubes, spirals, twists and waves when cooked.

10 Dark Stories Ancients Told About Our Night Skies

10 Dark Stories Ancients Told About Our Night Skies The stars in the night sky have captured the imagination of mankind for generations. We’ve seen the Big Dipper, little dogs, hunters, scorpions, and mythical creatures who chase each other across the horizon. We’ve also made up plenty of stories to explain how people and creatures got into the heavens. Some of these stories are extraordinarily disturbing. 10 Algol Algol, a star in the constellation Perseus, represents the severed head of Medusa, the Gorgon. In the well-known story, the hero Perseus used Medusa’s own reflection as a weapon against her and then saved her head to employ as a weapon.

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