Meringue Cloud Simulation
Cloud Formation Simulation Using a KitchenAid Mixer and French Meringue
Monaya MaGaurn, Agency a World Resources WTR LLC company — Feb 2026
Abstract
(KitchenAidm · ω) + (Sugars × EggWhitese)ⁿ → Cloudf = PastryChefp(Thoughtst + Texturex)
- KitchenAidm is the mixer, spinning at angular velocity ω
- Sugars and EggWhitese, whipped to the nth degree, represent the French meringue
- Cloudf is the fluffy, airy result — like cumulus dreams
- PastryChefp is the chef whose imagination stirs atmospheric wonder
- Thoughtst are metaphors for vapor, lift, and light
- Texturex is the final, delicate structure — stiff peaks or gentle haze
In essence: The beat of a KitchenAid, the discipline of sugar and whites, and the mind of a pastry chef together mimic nature’s own recipe for clouds.
Use of Classical Observable Physics and Meteorology
Objective
To demonstrate how whipping egg whites into meringue mimics the process of cloud formation via nucleation, suspension, and stabilization of air in a fluid medium.
Hypothesis
The mechanical whipping of egg whites introduces and suspends air bubbles within a protein matrix, visually and structurally resembling the formation of cumulus clouds through water vapor condensation on aerosols.
Recipe
Materials
- KitchenAid stand mixer with whisk attachment
- 3 large egg whites
- 100g granulated sugar
- Clear glass bowl (for observation)
- Thermometer
- Hygrometer (optional for analogy)
- Light source for visual cloud-like illumination
- Notebook to record texture, volume, and visual changes
Procedure
Step 1 – Baseline Observation
- Place the egg whites in the glass bowl
- Observe and note their initial viscosity and transparency
Step 2 – Mechanical Lift
- Begin whisking at medium speed for 2 minutes
- Observe the change: bubbles begin to form
- This simulates rising warm air carrying moisture into the sky
Step 3 – Add Sugar Gradually
- Slowly add sugar while continuing to whisk
- Sugar acts as a stabilizer — analogous to atmospheric particulates around which water vapor condenses
- Whisk for 5–7 more minutes or until stiff peaks form
Step 4 – Observe Final Structure
- Study the volume increase, opacity, and texture
- Compare to cumulus clouds: white, fluffy, voluminous, and suspended