WASHINGTON: Astronauts on the International Space Station have baked the first cookies in space, but they took far longer than on Earth.

The space station's Italian commander Luca Parmitano acted as baker aided by NASA astronaut Christina Koch for the chocolate chip cookie experiment.



ISS commander Lua Parmitano taking a cookie out of the space oven. (Photo: Twitter/Zero G Kitchen)

Cookies take around 15-20 minutes to bake on Earth but the astronauts discovered that their most successful efforts required at least two hours in the oven in space. The first and second cookies were in the oven for 25 minutes and 75 minutes but were still under-baked.

The best results came from 120 and 130 minutes in the oven.

"We made space cookies and milk for Santa this year," Koch tweeted.



The prototype oven which can be used in microgravity was designed and built by Nanoracks and Zero G Kitchen while the Double Tree by Hilton hotel chain supplied the raw cookie dough.

Astronaut Christina Toch inspecting a cookie. (Photo: Twitter/Zero G Kitchen)

"The ISS smelled like fresh chocolate chip cookies when @astro_luca opened the oven door! Just like home!" Nanoracks tweeted.

"While we have initial visual and scent feedback from the crew aboard the ISS, we're excited to dive into fully understanding the baking results - including breaking down why the bake time and temperature in space varies from what we are used to seeing on Earth," Mary Murphy, a Nanoracks payloads manager, said in a statement from Hilton.

While the astronauts said they looked and smelled like cookies, no one has tasted them.

Five cookies were baked at various times and temperatures to test optimal baking in space. The astronauts determined the “most successful" baking occurred at 300 degrees, but for 120 minutes. Totally worth the wait though! #cookiesinspace pic.twitter.com/aNQ3gaEyvs — DoubleTree by Hilton (@DoubleTree) January 23, 2020

Three of the cookies returned to Earth on the SpaceX Dragon spacecraft on Jan 7 and will undergo testing by food scientists to determine if they are edible.

"Currently on the International Space Station there's really a limited ability to prepare foods in ways that we're used to," Zero G Kitchen founder Ian Fichtenbaum said in a video posted by Hilton.

"And now as longer duration space flight is more common you want to focus on making space more comfortable," added co-founder Jordana Fichtenbaum.

