let’s say I have spooned some tomato paste into a glass jar, and there are all these pockets of air and I want to collect the tomato paste at the bottom of the container.
The tomato paste is viscous / thick enough that gravity is not causing it to settle anytime soon, so if I pick up and then slam the jar down, the forces can cause the paste to push down and settle into the jar.
I notice if I slam the jar on a cutting board or a hard counter-top, the tomato paste doesn’t settle very much. When I slam the jar on a rag, it seems like it settles better.
If I had to guess, I’m curtailing some of the force when hitting hard surfaces because I’m worried about the glass breaking, and I don’t like the noise so I hold back to reduce noise.
A folded-over damp rag however is softer and cushions the jar, so it doesn’t make noise and it feels like I can get away with using more force - so maybe more force = better settling?
I’m tired, so I thought I would ask why the rag trick works - but now I think I understand.
Anyway, let me know if you disagree with my reasoning here, or if I’ve overlooked something.


hm, that’s an interesting theory - I do think I’m able to get a sharper impact with the wet rag, there is no slow down before hitting the surface whereas maybe I’m not being as forceful but I’m also slowing down the jar more before hitting the hard surface? I guess that’s not that different than just using less force, right?