Site last updated: Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Log In

Reset Password
MENU
Butler County's great daily newspaper

COOKING Q&A

QUESTION: I’ve seen recipes from chefs that call for covering food with plastic wrap and then foil before putting the food in the oven. Won’t the plastic melt into the food?

ANSWER: Restaurant kitchens often use food-grade plastic wrap in the oven to trap steam and keep food very moist.

Food science writer Robert Wolke once offered a good explanation for why the plastic doesn’t melt: First, the aluminum foil shields the pan (and the plastic) from hot air and infrared radiation in the oven. Because it’s so thin, it can’t absorb enough heat to melt the plastic. It doesn’t retain heat, so it cools quickly when it leaves the oven.

The plastic prevents steam from escaping so the plastic wrap gets wet. That moisture keeps it from getting any hotter than 212 degrees. Most plastic wraps won’t melt until they get to 220 to 250 degrees. So with moisture on one side and foil on the other, the plastic doesn’t melt.

More in Recipes

Subscribe to our Daily Newsletter

* indicates required
TODAY'S PHOTOS