1What it takes to make brown
Brown needs two things to bump into each other
Browning isn't the apple "going bad." It's two ingredients meeting. Watch each one:
Oxygen in the air
An invisible gas floating all around you. It bumps into anything you leave out — including the wet inside of a freshly cut apple.
The apple's helper
A busy little molecule that wakes up when you cut the apple. Its one job is to grab oxygen — and when it does, it leaves a brown stain behind.
2One thing changes: can the helper work?
The bare cut vs a lemon coat
The whole mystery is about whether the helper gets to do its job. The bare slice we already know about — but what could a coat of lemon change? Here are the two set-ups, side by side:
Lemon's sour acid soaks in
Lemon is acidic — and acid can gum up molecules like the helper. So would a lemon coat actually stop the browning, or not? That's what you'll test next.
3Your turn — fast-forward time
Leave a bare slice out and slide time forward
Here's one plain apple slice on the counter. Drag the clock and watch the helpers grab oxygen all over the wet surface — the longer it sits, the browner it gets.
4Now race two slices
Brush one with lemon, then leave both out 🍋
Two fresh slices, just cut. Brush one with lemon, leave the other bare, then set them both on the counter. But guess first — then watch them race.
Guess before you watch
The bare slice will go brown — we already know cut apples do that. The real question is the lemon one. Leave both on the counter for hours: does the lemon slice turn brown too, or stay white?