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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. Meat - poultry - fish and shellfish - milk(dairy) - and eggs is complete protein. a protein - usually from an animal source that contains all the essential amino acids in sufficient amounts for the body. supports maintanence and growth.
heat of vapoization
Organic
composition of proteins
complete protein
2. Plants are the primary source of carbs - with exception of milk which contains lactose. muscles from animals can contain some in the form of glycogen - but not much. most are stored in seeds - roots - stems - and fruit of plants. common foods are ric
Foods High in Carbs
three major edible lipids groups
hydrolysis
Calories Sources per gram
3. 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.
lipids
six key elements of living things
Taste
Functional Food
4. Naturally occuring substances in plants that help block absorption of cholesterol from the digestive tract.
plant stanol esters
composition of proteins
cis fatty acids
Odor
5. No double bonds - primarily animal sources: meats - dairy- milk - butter. Plants: coconut - coconut oil - palm oil.
melting point
suspension
saturated fatty acids
hydration
6. If you smell something a lot - you wont smell it anymore.
Concerns about Food Biotechnology
odor and adaptation
Organic
three major edible lipids groups
7. Fragrance/sweet - acid/sour - burnt - goaty (caprilic)
Sight
dietary fiber
enzyme
Odor: Classification 2nd group
8. 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
Astringency
kosher
bound water
Chemical Basis of Savory (umami) tastes
9. Combination of perceptions 1. eyes - 2. touch of fingers and eating utensils - 3. mouthfeel as detected bby teeth and nerves in mouth. obvious in foods like popcorn - liver - crackers - potatoe chips - cereals - and celery.
hydrophylic
Texture in the mouth
Touch and Texture
peptide bond
10. 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
Odor: 2 different classifications
fatty acid structure
nutrients
Six Basic Nutrient Groups
11. 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
lipids
Foods using Biotechnology categories
Ribose
distillation
12. Concerned that genetically engineered plants might 'escape' into the wile - take over - and change the environment.
functions of carbs
Astringency
Concerns about Food Biotechnology: Gene Contamination
Factors Influencing food choice
13. 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.)
galactose
Food Group Plan
kosher
Inorganic Compounds
14. 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.
Chemical Basis of Savory (umami) tastes
maltose
Sterols
electrolyte
15. The temperature at which a solid changes to a liquid state. (solid/liquid/gas)
six key elements of living things
free water
melting point
electrolyte
16. 5 grams= 1 teaspoon - 28.35 grams= 1 ounce - 100 grams= 1/2 cup liquid
polysaccharides
Conversions to know
Monograph
Food: Religion of Hinduism
17. Dark Chocolate (reduce HBP) - tree nuts and peanuts (reduce risk sudden cardiac death)
hydrophobic
Hearing
melting point
Conventional Foods: Heart Health
18. Culture - ethnic influences - place of birth - geography and climate - cultural influences on manners - and religion.
polysaccharides
Factors Influencing food choice
Chemethesis...
Concerns about Food Biotechnology: Religous/ Cultural Concerns
19. Food components that nourish the body to provide groth - maintenance - and repair
Nutraceutical
specific heat
Glucose
nutrients
20. The temperature at which a substance converts from a liquid to a solid state.
saturated fatty acids
heat of solidification
Food: Religion and Islam
plant stanol esters
21. A procedure in which pure liquid is obtained from a solution by boiling - condensation - and collection of the condensed liquid in a separate container.
hemicellulose
Sensory Criteria
conventional foods
distillation
22. Sugars - starches - and fibers found in foods - Can be good - bad - simple and complex. made up of carbon - hydrogen - and oxygen. synthesized through phtosynthesis.
common fibers
cis fatty acids
Foods using Biotechnology categories
Carbohydrates
23. A compound that possesses both water- loving and water fearing properties so that it disperses in either water or oil.
emulsifier
emulsion
conventional foods
microorganism
24. Few- three to ten - monosaccharides linked together; these are not as common in foods.
fatty acid structure
oligosaccharides
polysaccharides
freezing point
25. 95 percent of all lipids. consist of three fatty acids attatched to a glycerol molecule.
coagulation
triglycerides
Glucose
Conventional Foods: Intestinal Health Maintenance
26. Accepts foods as posing no risk to health or safety - and therefore does not require mandatory labeling - unless the food contains new allergens - have modified nutritional profiles - or represent a new plant.
Functional Food
Chemethesis...
cellulose
The FDA and Genetically Engineered Foods
27. Spicy - floury - fruity - resinance - burnt - and fowl.
emulsion
Odor: Classification 1st group
lignin
lipids
28. 5% of finished product ingrediants meet organic criteria
Oligosaccharides
kosher
Organic
Inorganic Compounds
29. Expectations of flavor - time of day - taste less as we age - women taste more than men (women have more taste buds) - temperature (warmer=sweeter) - In fat (going to taste more) and flavors last longer - soluble in fat= better - more satisfying - pa
Flavor
Olfactory
gustatory cells
Things that affect Flavor
30. The movement of a solvent through a semipermeable membrane to the side with the higher solute concentration - equalizing solute concentration on both sides of the membrane.
Contains Organic Ingrediants
osmosis
polyusaturated fatty acids
functions of lipids in foods
31. A compound that inhibits oxidation - which can cause deterioration and rancidity
fiber
Taste Interactions
hydrolysis
Antioxidant
32. Located only in the liver and muscles. served as a reserve of energy. can be r hydrolyzed to release glucose needed to maintain blood glucose levels.
Protein gels
glycogen
Food: Religion of Buddhism
enzyme
33. A food which is formulates to be consumed or administered internally under the supervision of a physician and which is intended for the specific dietary management of a disease or condition. ex. PKU formulas free of phenylalanine.
Medical Foods
suspension
melting point
Chemical Basis of Sour Taste
34. Increase foods resistance to the following: - pests - disease - harsh growing conditions - transport damage - spoilage (longer shelf life)
Foods created with biotechnology
Taste
Halal
latent heat
35. The hydrogens on either side of the double bond - creating a linear configuration.
Concerns about Food Biotechnology: Religous/ Cultural Concerns
trans fatty acid
Food: Religion of Mormons
Foods High in Carbs
36. Fermented dairy products (probiotics) (reduce irritable bowel syndrome symptoms)
incomplete protein
oligosaccharides
Conventional Foods: Intestinal Health Maintenance
Oligosaccharides
37. Commonly expressed to FDA - concern that the protein products produced by these new genes could cause allergic reactions.
Concerns about Food Biotechnology: Allergies
Food: Religion and Judaism
Protein gels
Texture in the mouth
38. 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.
Thrifty Food Plan
six key elements of living things
Five Taste Stimuli and Location on Tongue
Conventional Foods: Urinary Tract Function
39. A digestive juice made by the liver from cholesterol and stored in the gall bladder.
Monograph
Denaturation
Halal
bile
40. Derivative of galactose; a component of pectin which is important to the ripening of fruits and the gelling of jams.
lipids
heat of vapoization
galacturonic acid
Modified Foods
41. 1 has 6 groups - 2nd has 4 groups.
common fibers
Odor: 2 different classifications
polyusaturated fatty acids
heat of solidification
42. The combined sense of taste - odor - and mouthfeel. NOT the same as taste.
Flavor
Food: Religion of Mormons
Chemethesis...
Sight
43. A completely homogenous mixture of a solute (usually a solid) dissoved in a solvent (usually a liquid)
Five Taste Stimuli and Location on Tongue
Food: Religion and Judaism
kosher
solution
44. Solid - liquid - or gas compound dissolving in another substance.
solute
USDA
supersaturated solution
Factors Influencing food choice
45. Bioactive compound (nutrients or non - nutrients) that has health benefits.
Nutraceutical
Food: Religion of Seventh- Day Adventist Church
Functions of proteins in food
Made with Organic Ingrediants
46. Different types - concentrations - and interactions of proteins in any given food that determine overall gel strength. ex Myosin is high.
polysaccharides
Protein gels
essential nutrients
composition of proteins
47. 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.
Odor
gram
disaccharides
latent heat
48. The pressure or pull that develops when two solutions of different solute concentration are on either side of a permeable membrane.
latent heat
osmotic pressure
Foods high in lipids
maltose
49. Not found on the flat - central surface but on the tongues underside - sides - and tip. decrease over time (explains why babies are more picky then elders.)
Taste Interactions
taste buds
Questions to ask if product is 'Natural'
lignin
50. The most abundant compunds on earth. plant cell walls. long chains of repeating glucose molecules however do not branch - and cannot be digested by human enzymes; therefore cellulose fiber is not absorbed - provides no calories - and simply passes th
polyusaturated fatty acids
Olfactory
cellulose
Functions of proteins in food