Food Science B
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Re: Food Science B
ooh -_- someone's already got a viscometer built and tested
red, remember this. red, remember this. MUST REMEMBER
red, remember this. red, remember this. MUST REMEMBER
Pilgrimage Homeschool Division B, Maryland
Visited 2012 and 2014 National Tournaments, 5th place Sounds of Music 2014
http://knittingfrenzy18.wordpress.com
Visited 2012 and 2014 National Tournaments, 5th place Sounds of Music 2014
http://knittingfrenzy18.wordpress.com
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Re: Food Science B
Hi everybody! I'm fairly new to this event (only did it last year for the first invitational of the year). I was just wondering, are the food science competitions, in general, majority test, majority lab, or a mixture of both? Also, is there a large emphasis on the effects of ingredients on baked goods, or the chemistry of the components of food? I'm sorry I'm asking so many questions, but if you could help me out, that would be awesome! Thank you!
"If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured or far away." ~ Henry David Thoreau
"We shall never know all the good that a simple smile can do." ~ Mother Teresa
"We shall never know all the good that a simple smile can do." ~ Mother Teresa
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Re: Food Science B
Also, I looked it up on youtube and there were a couple videos which helped me figure out how to do it last year...youngswimmer wrote:hey um im new to this event and i know how to make the viscosity meter but i dont know how to use it. so how do you... i know how to do the timing part but the graph confuses me.
Last edited by 135scioly on Thu Nov 29, 2012 6:55 pm, edited 1 time in total.
2014 Events: Entomology, Astronomy, Disease Detectives
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Re: Food Science B
Well for one thing, there's a lot of variation between individual competitions and event writers. At NY states last year, there was a test on various topics, a viscosity test, and we had to find the density of a brownie. The supervisor also graded the viscosity graphs, which I'm not sure she was supposed to do. Overall I didn't find it a very well written event, because the questions were pretty easy and somewhat confusing - the last question was about car oil, which has nothing to do with food science at all, so not sure where that came from. The nationals event, on the other hand, was about half lab and half written, with powder tests, viscosity, and maybe density (I don't quite remember). The test was partially multiple choice and part short answer, if I remember correctly, and covered everything from sugar molecules to effects of extra eggs to the history of preservation techniques. All in all, there'll probably be a mix of everything mentioned in the rules, with a couple other questions thrown in for good measure.10manwire wrote:Hi everybody! I'm fairly new to this event (only did it last year for the first invitational of the year). I was just wondering, are the food science competitions, in general, majority test, majority lab, or a mixture of both? Also, is there a large emphasis on the effects of ingredients on baked goods, or the chemistry of the components of food? I'm sorry I'm asking so many questions, but if you could help me out, that would be awesome! Thank you!
2015 events: WIDI, Protein Modeling, Geomapping, Chem Lab
2014 events: WIDI, Geomapping, Materials Science, Food Science
2013 events: WIDI, Mousetrap Vehicle, Heredity, Food Science, Metric Mastery
Best ever place: Nationals, 3rd in WIDI
2014 events: WIDI, Geomapping, Materials Science, Food Science
2013 events: WIDI, Mousetrap Vehicle, Heredity, Food Science, Metric Mastery
Best ever place: Nationals, 3rd in WIDI
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Re: Food Science B
Okay, thank you so much!
"If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured or far away." ~ Henry David Thoreau
"We shall never know all the good that a simple smile can do." ~ Mother Teresa
"We shall never know all the good that a simple smile can do." ~ Mother Teresa
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Re: Food Science B
Yes. I am fully aware of that. However, what I was thinking was why use two different sized holes (a small one one for the low viscosity liquids and a large one for the high viscosity liquids), instead of just using a hole large enough for the thickest liquids and using it for everything. I don't see why anybody would use two holes when you could just use one that works for all viscosities. And yes, of course I know to put tape on the hole...In what sense? It's almost necessary to have a larger hole for nonviscous liquids to actually get through in the next century...if you mean putting water in there wouldn't work, use tape or something to seal off the hole until you're ready to measure.In the rulebook, it says you can make a larger hole for more viscous liquids. Wouldn't this mess up your standard curve? I feel like this inclusion will give many strange looking curves at states... Does anybody else agree?
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2011-2012 Events
Bottle Rockets--States 1st/Nationals 22nd
Disease Detectives--States 2nd/Nationals 35th
Food Science--States 2nd/Nationals 8th
2012-2013 Events
Anatomy--States 1st/Nationals 34th
Disease Detectives--States 1st/Nationals 8th
Food Science--States 1st/Nationals 2nd
2011-2012 Events
Bottle Rockets--States 1st/Nationals 22nd
Disease Detectives--States 2nd/Nationals 35th
Food Science--States 2nd/Nationals 8th
2012-2013 Events
Anatomy--States 1st/Nationals 34th
Disease Detectives--States 1st/Nationals 8th
Food Science--States 1st/Nationals 2nd
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Re: Food Science B
Sorry, just after I posted that last message I realized how to properly use the quote funtion...
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2011-2012 Events
Bottle Rockets--States 1st/Nationals 22nd
Disease Detectives--States 2nd/Nationals 35th
Food Science--States 2nd/Nationals 8th
2012-2013 Events
Anatomy--States 1st/Nationals 34th
Disease Detectives--States 1st/Nationals 8th
Food Science--States 1st/Nationals 2nd
2011-2012 Events
Bottle Rockets--States 1st/Nationals 22nd
Disease Detectives--States 2nd/Nationals 35th
Food Science--States 2nd/Nationals 8th
2012-2013 Events
Anatomy--States 1st/Nationals 34th
Disease Detectives--States 1st/Nationals 8th
Food Science--States 1st/Nationals 2nd
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Re: Food Science B
I made two different viscotesters, each with a different sized hole. While this may seem impractical, it really is not. The problem with just using a medium sized hole is that it makes the low viscosity liquids (ie water and milk) extremely hard to differenciate due to the similarity in times. It also makes the high viscosity liquids take a ridiculously long time.senyab wrote:Yes. I am fully aware of that. However, what I was thinking was why use two different sized holes (a small one one for the low viscosity liquids and a large one for the high viscosity liquids), instead of just using a hole large enough for the thickest liquids and using it for everything. I don't see why anybody would use two holes when you could just use one that works for all viscosities. And yes, of course I know to put tape on the hole...In what sense? It's almost necessary to have a larger hole for nonviscous liquids to actually get through in the next century...if you mean putting water in there wouldn't work, use tape or something to seal off the hole until you're ready to measure.In the rulebook, it says you can make a larger hole for more viscous liquids. Wouldn't this mess up your standard curve? I feel like this inclusion will give many strange looking curves at states... Does anybody else agree?
I made the two completely different viscotesters with two different curve graphs and yesterday at the competition, they worked perfectly. Even though I knew on sight that the liquid was Karo corn syrup (and I remembered from last year that the answer would be 2000 cP), my partner tested the visco anyways and got extremely close to 2000, so even without the prior knowledge we would've gotten it right. Using two different sized holes is actually quicker at competition since you won't be stuck waiting for something like honey to flow through a medium sized hole. While it may take slightly longer to make, in my opinion, it is well worth it at competition.
2013 Nationals Results: Water Quality-2nd, Food Science-6th, Crime Busters-13th, Team- 7th
2014 National Results: Water Quality- 7th, Can't Judge A Powder- 6th, Crime Busters- 4th, Heredity- 5th, Team- FIRST!!!
2015 Events: Forensics, Green Generation, Fossils
2014 National Results: Water Quality- 7th, Can't Judge A Powder- 6th, Crime Busters- 4th, Heredity- 5th, Team- FIRST!!!
2015 Events: Forensics, Green Generation, Fossils
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Re: Food Science B
Is it a requirement for the viscotester to be made from a styrofoam cup?
"If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured or far away." ~ Henry David Thoreau
"We shall never know all the good that a simple smile can do." ~ Mother Teresa
"We shall never know all the good that a simple smile can do." ~ Mother Teresa
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Re: Food Science B
Nope not at all, you can use any sort of container
2014 Nationals:
Heredity (5th) Water Quality (7th)
2013 Nationals:
Forestry (4) Heredity (9) Rocks & Minerals (5)
2012 Nationals:
Forestry (3) Rocks & minerals (7) Aquifers (13)
Heredity (5th) Water Quality (7th)
2013 Nationals:
Forestry (4) Heredity (9) Rocks & Minerals (5)
2012 Nationals:
Forestry (3) Rocks & minerals (7) Aquifers (13)