Fresh water from lower layers surfaces,
heated water disappears to the depth where it no longer heats up the air — which is what you measured in this exercise.
Not exact matches
Forests are
disappearing; soils are being degraded;
waters are being polluted; the atmosphere is being
heated; species are becoming extinct.
After prep proceed to cook Aroborio rice in the usual way until it becomes the creamy Risotto we know and love: Sauté shallot in butter for just a few seconds / Add 2 C of rice and cook together for 1 minute / Add wine and cook until it nearly
disappears, another minute or so / Season lightly now with salt & pepper, and adjust when risotto is nearly finished / Add about half of the lemon zest and juice / Stir in simmering liquid 1/2 C at a time until it just covers the rice / Allow rice to simmer, uncovered, with occasional stirring until broth has «
disappeared» into the rice, then add more liquid until rice is barely covered again and stir / Proceed in this manner until rice is tender and creamy, about half an hour /
Heat up additional broth or
water if a little more is needed / When rice is tender or nearly so, adjust seasoning, add seafood, if any, and the rest of the lemon / Cook just a few more minutes until seafood is done / I like risotto «juicy» so I stop cooking while there's still plenty of liquid present / Optional: stir in 2 T of butter / Garnish with fresh herbs like cilantro, dill or parsley, a slice of lemon.
Reduce the
heat to low and cook for a further 5 minutes, stirring regularly, or until the potato is cooked and the
water has
disappeared.
Anecdotally, this is how I made Squash Risotto for four: * In a large saucepan melt 2 tablespoons of butter and sauté 1/4 cup finely chopped onion, scallion or leek for a few minutes / then add 1 1/2 cups Arborio rice to the mix / continue to sauté for five minutes along with a finely chopped teaspoon of sage or rosemary, stirring often / meanwhile, in another saucepan
heat 2 1/2 cups of stock or plain
water to a simmer and hold / add 1/2 cup white wine to the rice mix and let it cook away until liquid almost
disappears / add a teaspoon of salt and more if needed when risotto is done / begin adding simmering liquid 1/2 cupful at a time, stirring until liquid is nearly cooked away / add additional liquid 1/2 cup at a time and, once again, stir and allow to cook until liquid is almost gone before adding more.
Take off the
heat, squeeze the
water from the gelatine leaves and add the squishy gelatine to the pan, stirring until they
disappear.
Reduce
heat to low and simmer uncovered for 15 - 20 minutes until
water disappears, the quinoa is tender and you can see the little curlicues.
Adding vast amounts of CO2 to the atmosphere could
heat a planet to the point where it leaks so much
water that its oceans eventually
disappear
Turn
heat to low and cook uncovered for another 20 min or so until
water disappears plus a little longer.
-- I have listed the «catastrophic results» that are projected to occur, according to IPCC AR4 WG1 SPM, pp. 8 and 13: temperature increase of up to 6.4 °C,
heat waves, floods, droughts, increased intense tropical cyclones, extreme high sea level, as well as some of the secondary impacts, which IPCC projects in WG2, WG3: crop failures,
disappearing glaciers now supplying drinking
water for millions, spread of vector diseases, etc..
The hypothesis then goes on to say that this reradiated infrared
heat will be reflected back by the
water vapor up there, so trapping it, and preventing it from
disappearing into space, thus causing the atmosphere to get warmer and warmer.
As
water disappears from the west, and one
heat wave after another settles in on various locations, as storms get worse and wildfires more damaging, it's long past time we cared enough.
Right now it seems that: It's more likely that Summer Arctic Sea Ice extent will
disappear before 2025 It's more likely that 2 C will occur nearer to 2033 than 2040 It's more likely that 4 C will occur closer to 2050 than 2100 It's more likely that more people will die from
heat stress, disease, or severe clean
water and food shortages than extreme weather events.