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1. Food Science B&CPancakes! Science Olympiad
Food Science Event 2011
2. SO Coaches Institute 2010
3. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Before your event Research! Understand the science first
Experiments four mandatory
Mixing method
Ingredient chemistry
Method to form perfectly round pancakes
Viscotester Production and Standard Curve
4. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Mixing Technique Incorporate ingredients
Hydrate dry ingredients
Experiment 1 explores the best method to mix the batter
5. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Ingredients The right ingredients
Liquids
.
Lipids
Leavening agents
Flours
Sweeteners
Must understand WHY you are using the ingredient
what function does it provide?
Teams are limited to listed ingredients
6. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Best technique for a perfectly round pancake? Pour, plop, spiral, spread
.Experiment 3
Viscosity of batter is important
Dont want a pattern on the pancake.
May NOT use any aid to enclose batter (ring or wires) and may not trim the final pancake (we can tell by looking at the edges
.)
7. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Notebooks Notebook keeping
40% of Regional score
All experimental data and documentation must be recorded in notebook
May be bound, spiral, or ring
Must securely hold all items
Dont erase in lab notebook!
Document all references
See Example Notebooks
8. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Notebooks First page School and Student Names
Second Page Table of Contents
Third Page and Following Experiments
Each experiment must have:
Experiment Name
Hypothesis
Variables (controlled, independent; dependent)
Materials
Procedure
Qualitative and Quantitative Observations
Discussion of Results
9. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Pancake judging In clear plastic bag, frozen or thawed.
Judged on roundness
10. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Sensory Testing Tasting!
Two types of test
Sensory Analysis (State Tournament)
Score attributes of sample, add up score, high score best sample
Triangle Sensory Test (Experiment 2)
Two samples at a time. Used to see if difference in samples is discernable or to identify good tasters.
11. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Sensory Analysis Ballot can be used during trials to find best sample to take to State event and to analyze taste and texture of samples.
Judges will use this form at State event to taste your pancakes
12. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Triangle sensory test Two samples
three pieces
Two same, one different
Try to pick samples that are same size, color
Three random three-digit numbers for sample numbers.
May blindfold taster to minimize sight differences. Hand the taster the pieces and tell them the number of the sample.
Oreo Example
13. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Day of Event Notebook (containing label) checked in by 9:00 am
Bring frozen pancake to event (Regional).
3 stations
Pancake roundness
Ingredient chemistry
Viscosity determination
14. SO Coaches Institute 2010 State events Make your own pancakes!
Held in the professional kitchen, chemistry lab and tasting area at Schaub Hall, home of Food, Bioprocessing and Nutrition Sciences.
Three stations rotation
Make your pancake
Bring utensils, pan
B ingredients provided, C must provide all but milk and eggs.
Triangle Sensory Testing
Ingredient Chemistry and Viscosity
15. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Density Measure of mass per unit volume
Expressed in kilograms per cubic meter (kg/m3), grams per cubic centimeter (g/cm3)
dependent on temperature and pressure (PV=nRT)
Solids - may use ruler and geometry to figure out volume of sample, then weigh to find mass.
Liquids- Place a known volume of liquid on a balance measure in graduated cylinder, pipet, etc.
16. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Carbohydrates Carbohydrates
Cx(H2O)y carbon along with hydrogen and oxygen in the same ratio as water
Basic unit monosaccharide
Multiple units
disaccharide (2)
trisaccharide (3)
oligosaccharide (2-10)
polysaccharide (>10)
17. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Carbohydrates
18. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Carbohydrates Polysaccharides
Examples:
starch - glucose polymers, found in plants
cellulose found in plant fibers, insoluble
Pectin-units are sugar acids rather than simple sugars, found in vegetables and fruits
Branched vs. linear
Starches are a mixture of branched (amylopectin) and linear (amylose) polysaccharides
19. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Carbohydrates Reducing sugars
Examples: glucose, lactose, fructose
Non-reducing sugar contains no hemiacetal groups.
Example: sucrose
20. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Tests for carbohydrates
21. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Benedicts Test The Benedict's test allows us to detect the presence of reducing sugars (sugars with a free aldehyde or ketone group). All monosaccharides are reducing sugars. Some disaccharides are also reducing sugars. Other disaccharides such as sucrose are non-reducing sugars and will not react with Benedict's solution. Starches are also non-reducing sugars.
The copper sulfate (CuSO4) present in Benedict's solution reacts with electrons from the reducing sugar to form cuprous oxide (Cu2O), a red-brown precipitate.
The final color of the solution depends on how much of this precipitate was formed, and therefore the color gives an indication of how much reducing sugar was present if a quantitative reagent was used.
With increasing amounts of reducing sugar the result will be:
green yellow orange red
22. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Iodine Test The Iodine test is used to test for the presence of starch.
Iodine solution Iodine is dissolved in an aqueous solution of potassium iodide - reacts with starch producing a deep blue-black color.
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iodine_test"
23. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Lipids Present as fats extracted from plants or animals (butter, vegetable oil) or as constituents of food (chocolate)
Contributions to foods: texture and flavor
Contain only Carbon, hydrogen and oxygen
24. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Lipids
25. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Lipids Brown Bag Test
26. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Lipids Conversion between solid structure to a liquid state is called the melting point
How would changing the melting point of the lipid used change the cookie texture?
27. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Proteins
28. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Proteins
29. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Leavening agents Used to produce a gas that 'lightens' dough or batter.
used to raise baked goods.
water a leavening agent (pie crusts, some crackers)
air incorporated into batter (angel and sponge cakes)
expand when heated and cause the raising of the dough or batter when gas is trapped in matrix of gluten and starch from flour
30. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Leavening agents Baking soda
-NaHCO3
Needs moisture plus an acid source such as vinegar, citrus juice, sour cream, yogurt, buttermilk, chocolate, cocoa (not Dutch-processed), honey, molasses (also brown sugar), fruits or maple syrup to react
used to neutralize acids in foods
around 4 times as strong as baking powder
can cause soapy flavor in high amounts
31. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Leavening agents Baking powder
NaHCO3 plus acidifier(s) and drying agent (usually an acid salt and cornstarch)
can cause acidity and/or bitter off-flavor
two acidifiers used in double acting to produce CO2 in two steps
Reacts when moistened and also reacts when heated
double-acting is the only commercial baking powder available today.
32. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Viscosity The resistance of a fluid to deformation.
Temperature dependent
*Dynamic or simple viscosity
Kinematic viscosity ratio of viscosity:density
Shear viscosity reaction to a shearing stress (pumping, spraying, etc.)
Must know general nomeclature
33. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Viscotester 8 oz Styrofoam cup
Punch circular Hole in center of the bottom of the cup FROM THE INSIDE
Place tape over hole
Fill with liquid
Use standard fluids to calibrate.
34. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Time to play! Viscosity of liquids
Production of viscotester
Standard Curve
35. SO Coaches Institute 2010 Questions?
E-mail specific questions
ncsofoodscience@gmail.com