subject
Biology, 29.01.2020 05:52 forevertj

Materials:

4 eggs

two cups of milk (preferably whole/full cream, or made from powdered milk)

your own hair from a hairbrush or comb

small saucepan

mixing bowl

baking tray or cookie sheet

aluminum foil

candy thermometer or cooking/meat thermometer

stove/oven (with oven mitts/pot holders)

part a: eggs

crack your eggs over your mixing bowl one at a time. separate the egg whites and yolks so that only egg whites are in your mixing bowl. if you get any egg yolk into your egg white mixture, you will need to restart.

pour the raw egg whites into a small saucepan and place over “low heat” on your stove.

place your thermometer into the mixture and begin recording the temperature of the egg whites.

make observations about the egg white mixture as the temperature increases. you might want to mention the appearance, color, texture, or smell of the mixture. record all observations and their associated temperatures in your data table.

keep heating the mixture until a clear texture change in the entire mixture occurs. you may need to increase the heat of the stovetop if the mixture’s temperature isn’t increasing.

dispose of the egg whites. clean the saucepan, mixing bowl, and thermometer

part b: milk

pour two cups of milk into your clean saucepan. if you are using powdered milk, first combine the powdered milk with about two cups of water, mix well, and let sit before adding to saucepan.

turn the stove on to low heat and insert your thermometer to begin recording temperature.

make observations about the milk as the temperature increases. try to mention the appearance, color, texture, or smell of the mixture. record all observations and their associated temperatures in your data table.

keep heating the mixture until there is a clear texture change. you may need to increase the heat of the stove top if the temperature isn’t increasing.

dispose of the milk. clean the saucepan, bowl, and thermometer



part c: hair

preheat your oven to 200 degrees fahrenheit.

place aluminum foil over your baking/cookie sheet.

acquire some of your own hair from a comb or toothbrush and place it on your covered baking/cookie sheet. insert the sheet into the oven once it has reach 200 degrees fahrenheit.

let the hair heat up in the oven, watching for any changes (about 5 minutes).

increase the temperature of the oven by 25 degrees fahrenheit and allow the hair to heat up for 5 minutes. record any changes to the hair appearance or texture. you can simply observe the hair through the oven window, but you may want to remove the hair from the oven for a closer look. make sure to use oven mitts and to not open the oven too often (one observation per temperature increase will be enough).

record all observations and their associated temperatures in your data table. keep heating the hair until there is a noticeable change in appearance or texture.

remove the hair from the oven and turn it off. allow the hair to cool and then dispose of the hair and aluminum foil.

questions:

about at which temperature did the protein in eggs denature? how could you tell?

about at which temperature did the protein in milk denature? how could you tell?

about at which temperature did the protein in hair denature? how could you tell?

why do you think different proteins denature at different temperatures?

why might it be useful to denature a protein?

ansver
Answers: 2

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4 eggs

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