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Test your basic knowledge |
Food Science
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
engineering
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Measures the amount of available (free) water in foods. water activity ranges from 0 to the highest value of 1.00 - which is pure water. determines perishability- thus high in water content such as meat - milk - veggies and fruits are more prone to m
Food: Religion of Mormons
water activity
Factors Influencing food choice
Organic
2. Animals not allowed - blood not allowed - improper slaughtering method - carrion (decaying carcass) not allowed - intoxicants not allowed - kosher foods - no alcohol - no pork - no tea and coffee
saturated solution
Food: Religion and Islam
P/S ratio
Water Content in Food
3. Plant or animal organism that can only be observed under the microscope ex. bacteria - mold - yeast - and virus.
boiling point
enzyme
Odor
microorganism
4. The amount of heat required to convert a liquid to gas
coagulation
inulin
pectin substances
heat of vapoization
5. Many monosaccharides linked together in long chains; these include starch and fibers.
Volatile Molecules
polysaccharides
plant stanol esters
Concerns about Food Biotechnology: Gene Contamination
6. There are 4 - actual food (corn) - foods derived from or containing ingrediants of actual food. (cornmeal) - foods containing single ingrediants or additives from GMO's (amino acids - vitamins - colors) - foods containing ingrediants obtained from en
Concerns about Food Biotechnology: Allergies
Foods using Biotechnology categories
Concerns about Food Biotechnology: Religous/ Cultural Concerns
functions of carbs
7. Triglycerides (fats and oils) - phospholipids - and sterols.
Modified Foods
Questions to ask if product is 'Natural'
three major edible lipids groups
galacturonic acid
8. Part of lactose - the sugar found in milk.
bile
Volatile Molecules
Genetically modified foods (GMO's)
galactose
9. Two glucose molecules linked together. disaccharide. also known as malt sugar. primarily used in the production of beer and breakfast cereals. is produced whenever starch breaks down. ex. germinating seeds - during starch digestion.
plant stanol esters
lactose
taste buds
maltose
10. No double bonds - primarily animal sources: meats - dairy- milk - butter. Plants: coconut - coconut oil - palm oil.
lignin
Odor: Classification 2nd group
saturated fatty acids
peptide bond
11. Food components that nourish the body to provide groth - maintenance - and repair
Food Group Plan
Monosaturated fatty acids
nutrients
triglycerides
12. The idea - customs - skills - and art of a group of people in a given period of civilization.
suspension
Foods using Biotechnology categories
Culture
Sensory Criteria
13. Water fearing - non - water soluble
Foods created with biotechnology
Food: Religion of Seventh- Day Adventist Church
Odor: 2 different classifications
hydrophobic
14. Sounds can play a role in evaluating quality. ex. sizzling - crunching - popping - bubbling - pouring - crackling - and dripping.
Foods using Biotechnology categories
Food: Religion of Mormons
osmotic pressure
Hearing
15. Combining two saccharides. three most common are sucrose - lactose - and maltose.
Odor: Classification 1st group
Odor
Starch: digestible polysaccharide
disaccharides
16. Tastes: sweet - sour - bitter - salty - and savory (umami) Sweet: tip of the tongue - Sour: back/side of the tongue - Bitter: back of the tongue - Salty: side/front of the tongue.
Chemethesis...
complete protein
Five Taste Stimuli and Location on Tongue
Contains Organic Ingrediants
17. The amount of heat required to raise the temperature of 1 gram of a substance 1C
Water and Function
specific heat
diverticulosis...
Oligosaccharides
18. Numerous roles: sweetness - solubility - crystillazation - color - moisture - absorption - texture - fermentation - and preservation.
fructose
Foods created with biotechnology
Taste Interactions
functions of carbs
19. Most influential factor in people's selection of foods. sense volatile and non - volatile. has to have a liquid or saliva to sense.
Chemical Basis of Savory (umami) tastes
polysaccharides
biotechnology
Taste
20. The basic building block of matter; individual elements found on the periodic table
atoms
microorganism
specific heat
Conventional Foods: Urinary Tract Function
21. Promotes vegetarianism (but not all) - against their belief to injure or kill a person or animal - reject poultry - eggs - and flesh of any animal and do not eat garlic - onions - mushrooms - turnips - lentils - or tomatoes. (strict hindus) - dairy f
hydrophobic
triglycerides
Food: Religion of Hinduism
Texture in the mouth
22. Eyes recieve the first impression of foods: shapes - colors - consistency - serving size - and the presence of any outward defects. Color can be decieving and effect choices by consumers. color palette of foods on a plate contributes to or detracts f
heat of solidification
saturated fatty acids
Sight
phospholipids
23. Kosher animals allowed - blood not allowed - mixing of milk and meat not allowed or consumed in same meal - kosher foods allowed -3 food groups: meat - dairy - pareve (no meat or dairy) - seperate plates - seperate kitchen - seperate meals.
Conventional Foods: Urinary Tract Function
Food: Religion and Judaism
Six Basic Nutrient Groups
Flavor
24. USDA has 4 food plans/ levels that can feed a family to meet 100% of nutritional needs - not great quality however - barely get by. - food stamps
Thrifty Food Plan
three major edible lipids groups
polysaccharides
Chemical Basis of Sour Taste
25. The tmperature at which a liquid changes to a solid
freezing point
gram
flocculation
polysaccharides
26. Were first identified in 1908. Umami is actually glutamate - an amino acid that imparts the taste of beef broth - but without the salt. not sure where it is located in mouth(possibly roof of mouth or bottom pallet). anything that adds body and a good
biotechnology
Sterols
Chemical Basis of Savory (umami) tastes
atoms
27. Incorporated into the chemical structure of other nutrients such as carbs - fats - and proteins. not easily removed and is resistant to freezing and drying. ex. bread
Food Group Plan
kosher
Monograph
bound water
28. The body can only synthesize only about half of the compounds it requires in order to manufacture the proteins needed for the body. these substances needed for protein manufacture are amino acids. 9 are essential and must be obtained from the diet.
Proteins
fatty acid structure
Hearing
colloidal dispersion
29. An electrically charged ion in a solution
electrolyte
odor and adaptation
Types of fatty acids
Olfactory
30. Creates definitions on labels for meat - poultry - and eggs.
Inorganic Compounds
USDA
bile
Flavor
31. Cellulose - hemicellulose - and pectic substances.
Foods created with biotechnology
polysaccharides
common fibers
Concerns about Food Biotechnology: Gene Contamination
32. One double bond; primarily plant sources. ex. olives - olive oil - peanuts - peanut butter - and avocado.
Monosaturated fatty acids
Chemical Basis of Salty Tastes
Modified Foods
hydrophobic
33. Address the obesity epidemic. one out of every 4 are classified as obese. women today consume 2403/day (1600) and men 3067/day (2 -400-2600)
Organic
Concerns about Food Biotechnology
Conversions to know
Calorie Control
34. Naturally occuring substances in plants that help block absorption of cholesterol from the digestive tract.
plant stanol esters
Ribose
specific heat
peptide bond
35. An unstable solution created when more than the maximum solute is dissolved in solution.
saturated fatty acids
functions of lipids in foods
supersaturated solution
enzyme
36. The ability of one substance to blend uniformly with another.
functions of carbs
Oligosaccharides
solution
solubility
37. Largest amount of water present in foods and is easily seperated from the food. ex. fruit
Foods using Biotechnology categories
six key elements of living things
free water
colloidal dispersion
38. Carbon - hydrogen - nitrogen - oxygen - phosphorus - and sulfur (CHNOPS)
colloidal dispersion
bile
six key elements of living things
Flavor
39. Conveys a foods texture - consistency - astringency - and temperature.
Odor: 2 different classifications
oligosaccharides
Chemethesis...
Touch
40. The hydrogens on the same side as a double bond and make a U like formation.
cis fatty acids
electrolyte
Chemical Basis of Salty Tastes
Questions to ask if product is 'Natural'
41. Food that is 'fit - right - proper' to be eaten according to jewish dietary laws. (people who purchase kosher: moslems - seventh- day adventists - vegetarians - individuals with allergies or food intolerances.)
kosher
Gene
suspension
lactose
42. Described as coarse - grainy - sandy - crisp - fine - dry - moist - greasy - smooth - lumpy - rough - sticky - tough - solid - porous - bubbly - or flat. *tenderness is somewhat dependent on texture (from teeth)
Made with Organic Ingrediants
bile
Texture in the mouth
gustatory cells
43. 1. does the product contain an artificial ingrediant - a chemical preservative - or any synthetic or artifical ingredient? 2. are the product and its ingredients only minimally processed?
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44. 24000 smells on an average person; trained profession can sense almost 10 -000. odor is detected by volatile (very low concentration) levels ( very few ppm to smell something) and has to be in the air to sense. 3rd most important sense.
polyusaturated fatty acids
Five Taste Stimuli and Location on Tongue
Carbohydrates
Odor
45. The fats and oils in foods. they differentiate in two ways. 1. fats are solid at room temperature - whereas oils are liquid. 2. fats are usually derived from animal sources - whereas oils are from plants.
microorganism
saturated solution
lipids
ionize
46. Different from one another in two major ways: their length - which is determined by number of carbon atoms - 2. their degree of saturation which is determined by the number of double bonds b/w carbon atoms. consist of an acid group and a methyl group
100% organic
pectin substances
fatty acid structure
Carbohydrates
47. Solid - liquid - or gas compound dissolving in another substance.
water activity
disaccharides
protein complementation
solute
48. Carbohydrate= 4kcal/gram - Protein= 4kcal/gram - Fat= 9kcal/gram - Alcohol= 7kcal/gram
hydrophobic
Flavor
Calories Sources per gram
inulin
49. Two incomplete- protein foods - each of which supplies the amino acids missing in the other - combine to yield a complete protein profile.
composition of lipids
Taste
protein complementation
Texture in the mouth
50. 95 percent of all lipids. consist of three fatty acids attatched to a glycerol molecule.
triglycerides
Sight
freezing point
diverticulosis...