GCSE Food Tech - Key Terms By Definition

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Last updated: March 19, 2018
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Natural or synthetic chemical substances added to food during manufacture or processing to improve the quality, flavour, colour, texture or stability of the product.
Additives
Incorporating air into a mixture.
Aeration
To stir, shake or disturb a liquid.
Agitate
‘Firm to the bite’, a description of the texture of correctly cooked pasta.
Al Dente
An immune system reaction that occurs soon after eating a certain food and can cause severe symptoms.
Allergies
Foods that can be stored, at room temperature (ordinary room temperature 19°C to 21°C), in a sealed container. All foods found on supermarket shelves are ___ foods.
Ambient
The building blocks of proteins.
Amino Acids
Diet related health condition caused by the lack of iron in the body, where the body lacks enough healthy red blood cells or haemoglobin.
Anemia
A duty of care on people to ensure that animals are as well treated as possible.
Animal Welfare
A molecule that is able to stop the oxidisation process in other molecules and therefore can be useful in stopping foods from deteriorating. ___ can prevent or slow down damage to the body which otherwise can lead to diseases such as heart disease. ___ also improve our immune system.
Antioxidants
Vitamins A, D and E, found in fruits and vegetables.
Water Soluble Vitamins
A dish sprinkled with breadcrumbs or cheese and breadcrumbs and browned under the grill.
Au Gratin
Pathogenic microscopic living organisms, usually single-celled, that can be found everywhere. They can be dangerous, such as when they cause infection, or beneficial, as in the process of fermentation (for wine).
Bacteria
Convection-conduction, cooking foods in a hot oven.
Baking
A diet which provides all the necessary nutrients in the correct amount/proportions to meet the body's needs.
Balanced Diet
The number of energy kilojoules the body needs to stay alive.
Basal Metabolic Rate
When fats or juices are poured over something (usually meat) while cooking in order to keep it moist, eg roasting meats.
Basting
A mixture of flour, milk or water, and usually an egg.
Batter
Date on food products after which a non-high risk food will be safe to eat, but not be at its best.
Best Before
To bring the ingredients in a mixture together using an ingredient, eg egg.
Binding
Substance which speeds up a chemical reaction.
Biological Catalyst
Using yeast to produce CO2 gas.
Biological Raising Agent
The number of amino acids that a protein food contains.
Biological Value
enables energy to be released from carbohydrates in the body, found in a variety of foods, eg meat, dairy, fruit, wholemeal products. Deficiency of this is called Beri-Beri.
B Vitamins
A method of cooking where food is cooked very quickly in boiling water for a short period of time. It stops enzyme actions which can cause loss of flavour, colour and texture. Conduction-convection.
Blanching
Health of the skeleton.
Bone Health
Conduction-convection, sealing meat/vegetables in hot fat, then cooking slowly in a covered dish with some cooking liquid.
Braising
Use thumb and forefinger and grip either side of the ingredient, use knife under the bridge to cut.
Bridge Hold
An Eastern religion. Its followers consider living beings to be sacred. Many are vegetarian or vegan.
Buddhists
Main mineral in the body, teeth and bones. It needs vitamin D to help absorption.
Calcium
Breaking up of sucrose molecules (sugar) when they are heated. This changes the colour, flavour and texture of the sugar as it turns brown into caramel.
Caramelisation
Macronutrients required by all animals; made in plants by the process of photosynthesis.
Carbohydrates
Used to measure the amount of CO2 and other greenhouse gases that are released throughout the whole process of producing and consuming food.
Carbon Footprint
A narrowing of the arteries that supply your heart with oxygen-rich blood, due to the build-up of fatty deposits within the artery walls.
Cardiovascular Disease
A dish consisting of a food that is completely covered in liquid and then cooked in the oven.
Casserole
Animals, birds, fish and shellfish hunted and caught in the wild for eating.
Caught Ingredients
Uses baking powder or bicarbonate of soda to produce CO2 gas.
Chemical Raising Agent
Carried in the blood attached to proteins called lipoproteins. There are two main forms: LDL (low density lipoprotein) and HDL (high density lipoprotein).
Cholesterol
A light, crisp, hollow pastry used to make profiteroles, eclairs and gougères.
Choux Pastry
Tips of fingers and thumb tucked under to hold the ingredient before chopping.
Claw Grip
A large-scale, long-term shift in the planet's weather patterns or average temperatures, which can lead to unusual weather conditions.
Climate Change
The setting or joining together of lots of denatured protein molecules during heating or change in PH. An irreversible change to the appearance and texture of protein foods.
Coagulation
To add another ingredient to create an attractive finish, or to create a protective layer on food when cooking.
Coat
Cannot absorb the protein gluten. Can result in ___ disease: a chronic intestinal disorder caused by sensitivity to the protein gliadin contained in the gluten of cereals.
Coealiac
Added to intensify the colour of food to attract consumers. Can be natural or artificial.
Colourings
Transfer of heat through a solid object into food.
Conduction
Thickness or viscosity.
Consistency
Transfer of heat through a liquid or air circulation into food.
Convection
A term used to designate farming techniques that are traditionally, and often controversially, orientated towards using technology, pesticides, chemicals and other synthetic tools in the cultivation of crops.
Conventional farming
A large general purpose knife with a deep blade, used for cutting, chopping, slicing and dicing.
Cook’s knife
A traditional style of cooking and eating that has developed in a country or region of the world.
Cuisine
Range of temperatures between 5°C to 63°C at which bacteria begin to multiply rapidly
Danger zone
How long a food product will last.
Date marks
A state of lacking or incompleteness. For example, ___ in the consumption of certain vitamins can cause health issues.
Deficiencies
To loosen the browned juices on the bottom of the pan by adding a liquid to the hot pan and stirring while the liquid is boiling.
Deglazing
Chemical bonds in the protein food have broken, causing the protein molecule to unfold and change shape.
Denaturation
To remove seeds before using.
De-seed
To remove the skin by either putting the fruit or vegetable into boiling water or, for peppers, placing on direct heat.
De-skin
Breaking up of the starch molecules into smaller groups of glucose molecules when exposed to dry heat, eg toast.
Dextrinisation
Complex carbohydrate/non-starch polysaccharide, eg whole grain cereals and cereal products.
Dietary fibre
Advice on diet, use of the 'eat well guide'.
Dietary guidelines
An estimate of the nutritional requirements of a healthy population.
Dietary Reference Values
A carbohydrate made from two sugar molecules.
Disaccharide
Test used to find out whether or not people can tell the difference between similar samples of food.
Discrimination tests
When making two or more dishes by splitting the tasks within the recipes to make the best use of your time. For example, if making a cake and soup, the sponge mix for the cake could be made while the vegetables for the soup are sautéing.
Dovetail
Heating food on a low heat without any fat or oil. Conduction.
Dry-frying
The way a person or group eats, considered in terms of what types of food are eaten, in what quantities, and when.
Eating patterns
Informs individuals of the variety of food groups required for a healthy balanced diet.
Eatwell Guide
Power or capacity to produce a desired effect; effectiveness.
Efficacy
Causes fruit to ripen, change colour, texture, flavour and aroma; maturing of fruits and vegetables.
Enzymic action
The discolouration of a fruit or vegetable due to the reaction/chemical process where oxygen and enzymes in the plant cells of the food to react and cause the surface to become brown. This process cannot be reversed.
Enzymic browning
Refers to the tiny drops of one liquid spread evenly through a second liquid. An emulsifier (such as egg yolk) is used to stabilise an insoluble mixture.
Emulsification
The impact of human activities on the natural environment.
Environmental issues
Biological/natural substances (catalysts) which speed up biochemical reactions without being used up themselves.
Enzymes
A useful indication of how much energy the average person needs
Estimate Average Requirement
A diet which contains too much protein.
Excess protein
Food choice according to lifestyle, attitudes, activities, likes, dislikes, beliefs, cultures.
Factors which influence food choice
A partnership between producers and consumers; selling on Fairtrade terms provides farmers with a better deal and more income. This allows them the opportunity to improve their lives and plan for their future.
Fairtrade
Macronutrient which supplies the body with energy. (Not Carbohydrates)
Fats
The A, D E, and K groups of Vitamins
Fat soluble vitamin
A thin, flexible, narrow blade knife used to fillet fish.
Filleting knife
A cut of fish that is free from bones.
Fish fillet
Improve or modify the natural flavours and odours in food.
Flavourings
Strengthens the bones and teeth, helps prevent tooth decay.
Fluoride
The process of trapping a gas inside a liquid, for example meringue, whisked sponge.
Foam Formation
Works with Vitamin B12 to make red blood cells. Found in leafy green vegetables, whole grains and some fruit.
Folic acid
A long-term condition, which after some time may cause the consumer to feel unwell and have a range of symptoms.
Food intolerance
Advertising and promoting a food product to encourage its purchase.
Food marketing
Illness caused by pathogenic bacteria/toxins, for example e-coli: salmonella, listeria, staphylococcus aureus.
Food poisoning
A piece of equipment with various attachments that can prepare a variety of foods, such as slicing and grating vegetables.
Food processor
The place where food originates (where is it grown, raised or reared).
Food provenance
Ability of people to buy sufficient safe, nutritious and affordable foods.
Food security
Adding vitamins and minerals to foods during its manufacture.
Fortification
A method of farming husbandry where the animals, for at least part of the day, can roam freely outdoors.
Free range
All monosaccharides and disaccharides added to foods by the manufacturer, cook, or consumer, plus sugars naturally present in honey, syrups, and fruit juices.
Free sugars
Carbohydrate, which is the natural sugar in fruit –mostly in the form of fructose, or glucose.
Fruit sugars
Decorations on savoury food.
Garnishes
When starch granules swell when cooked with liquid, then burst open and release the starch, causing the liquid to thicken.
Gelatinisation
A scientific technique that enables a particular characteristic from one plant or animal to be inserted into the genes of another.
Genetically Modified
One of the core proteins of the gluten part of wheat seeds.
Gliadin
The other one ^
Glutenin
The heating up of the earth creating a greenhouse effect.
Global warming
The process of the two wheat proteins meeting, in presence of water.
Gluten formation
Food which does not contain gluten (crucial for those with Coeliac disease).
Gluten free
Put in order particular characteristics of a food product.
Grading tests
Radiation cooking foods under intense heat.
Grilling
Plants grown for food.
Grown ingredients
People give their opinion of one or more food products by filling out a table that uses a preference scale.
Hedonic rating test
Protein foods that contain all the essential amino acids.
High Biological Value
Foods that are high in moisture and nutrients, especially protein (perishable foods: meat, shellfish, cooked rice, eggs, milk, cream). They support the growth of pathogenic microorganisms, such as bacteria.
High risk foods
An Eastern religion. Many Hindus are vegetarian and many practice fasting. In ___, the cow is sacred and is not eaten.
Hinduism
To flavour liquid with aromatic ingredients by slowly heating to a boiling point and then allowing it to cool.
Infuse
Helps to produce hormone thyroxin, needed for stable metabolic rate.
Iodine
Liquids with seasoning, spices, herbs or wine added.
Infused liquids
Farming that aims to produce as much as possible, usually with the use of chemicals.
Intensive farming
Needed to make haemoglobin in the red blood cells, requires Vitamin C for absorption.
Iron
Semitic religion. Muslim dietary laws require that poultry/meat is slaughtered in a special ritual called Zibah. Certain foods are forbidden.
Islam
Semitic religion which has a number of food laws called the Kashrut. Kashrut food is called Kosher foods.
Judaism
Hint
Answer
Cutting vegetables into matchstick strips.
Julienne
To manipulate dough by pushing it across a work surface and pulling it back. This is essential to develop the gluten.
Knead
To knead out the carbon dioxide in risen dough to remove large air pockets to ensure an even texture.
Knock back
A natural sugar found in milk and dairy products.
Lactose
A condition which means you cannot digest disaccharide sugar lactose.
Lactose intolerant
To make up a dish with differing ingredients one on top of another.
Layer
Phase of development of people through their lives (young children, teenagers, adults, elderly).
Life stages
Buying of food from local producers to avoid the environmental impact of food miles.
Locally produced
Protein foods that are missing one or more essential amino acids.
Low Biological Value (LBV)
A type of food (eg fat, protein, carbohydrate) required in large amounts in the diet.
Macronutrient
Must be done, or is demanded, by law on a food label.
Mandatory information
To soak foods such as fish, meat, poultry and vegetables in a liquid to help develop the flavour, tenderise and in some instances colour the food before it is cooked. The liquid can be acidic or a salty solution. Protein is denatured by marinating.
Marinade
To reduce to a soft mass by using a masher.
Mash
Whisking, beating, sieving, creaming, rubbing in or folding to trap air into the mixture.
Mechanical raising agent
All bacteria in milk are removed, by forcing it through filtration membranes, then pasteurised and homogenised.
Micro filtered
Nutrients required in small quantities to facilitate a range of physiological functions.
Micronutrients
Tiny forms of life, usually single cell microscopic organisms such as bacteria, moulds and fungi.
Microorganisms
A single molecule of glucose linked to a single molecule of galactose to form a carbohydrate, known as lactose.
Milk sugars (lactose)
Breaking cereal grains (seeds) down and separating the layers, turning grain into flour.
Milling
Chemical substances found in a wide variety of foods.
Minerals
Preparation before starting to cook.
Mise en place
To combine two or more ingredients together to become one.
Mix
A simple carbohydrate. Mono means one, saccharide means sugar.
Monosaccharide
Fats that contain one double bond in the molecule.
Monounsaturated fats
Relate to what people believe are right or wrong, may be concerned how food is produced.
Moral and ethical beliefs
A type of microorganism fungus that grows and multiplies in filaments creating a fuzzy appearance on food. It is a soft, green or grey growth that develops on old food. Can produce toxins (poisons) which may cause food poisoning. May give some cheeses their characteristic colours and flavours.
Mould
Two types of pathogenic microorganisms are involved, bacteria and moulds.
Mould in cheese
A food made from the fungi family which contains all the essential amino acids needed by the body. Suitable for lacto-ovo vegetarians.
Mycoprotein
The properties found in food and drinks that give nourishment – vital for growth and the maintenance of life. The main nutrients needed by the human body are carbohydrates, proteins, fats, vitamins and minerals.
Nutrients
Nutritional information for different foods, creating a nutritional profile of the specific nutrients in the food.
Nutritional analysis
Food choices determined by life stage.
Nutritional guidelines
Informs consumers about the nutritional profile of the product, the types and amounts of different nutrients a food contains.
Nutritional labelling
Information about the energy (measured in kilocalories/kilojoules), the macronutrients (carbohydrates, protein, fats), micronutrients (vitamins and minerals) and how they impact on the body.
Nutritional value
Diet-related disease where the body contains too much stored fat.
Obesity
Keeping drops of oil or fat suspended in a liquid to prevent them from joining together, for example butter.
Oil in water emulsion
The receptors found in the back of the nose that are responsible for our sense of smell/aromas.
Olfactory systems
Food produced by methods that comply with the standards of organic farming. Standards vary worldwide, but organic farming in general features practices that strive to cycle resources, promote ecological balance, and conserve biodiversity.
Organic
Farming that produces food using natural methods without the use of chemicals, fertilisers and pesticides.
Organic farming
Characteristics of food that affect our organs or senses.
Organoleptic qualities
Reduction in mineral content of the bones, this occurs gradually, usually in the elderly.
Osteoporosis
Substances pick up oxygen from the air; they then oxidise to undergo a chemical reaction, resulting in food losing freshness and colour.
Oxidation
Reward provided by foods or fluids that are agreeable with regard to the satisfaction of nutritional, water, or energy needs.
Palatability
People given two similar samples of food and they have to say which one they prefer.
preference
A small multi-purpose knife mainly used for slicing and dicing.
Paring knife/vegetable knife
The process of heating a food to a specific temperature for a specific period of time in order to kill microorganisms that could cause disease, spoilage or undesired fermentation.
Pasteurisation
Following certain routines to ensure a person does not contaminate food with bacteria from their body.
Personal hygiene
Helps calcium to mineralise the teeth and bones.
Phosphorous
Energy balance (% of energy from nutrients), the amount of energy the body uses for movement and physical activity daily.
Physical Activity Level (PAL)
A method of cooking where food is cooked in a liquid that is just below boiling point. Conduction-convection.
Poaching
A complex carbohydrate: many sugar molecules joined together, they do not taste sweet.
Polysaccharide
Fats that contain several double or even triple bonds in the molecule.
Polyunsaturated fats
The ability of fat to soften over a range of temperatures to hold its shape, or be shaped and spread.
Plasticity
Distinctive way food is presented in different cuisines.
Presentation style
Used to prevent food from spoilage by microorganisms; increases the shelf life of commodities.
Preservatives
The conversion of raw materials into food commodities, for example milling of wheat grain into flour.
Primary processing
People asked to rate the intensity of a food product from 1–5 against a set of sensory descriptors.
Profiling
A macronutrient that is essential to building muscle mass.
Protein
Manufactured protein food products consumed in place of meat or fish.
Protein alternatives
Eating a combination of low biological value foods together to provide all the essential amino acids that the body requires.
Protein complementation
The place of origin of something.
Provenance
The last rising of the bread dough in its final shape before it is baked.
Proving
A heating process that does not require physical contact between the heat source and the food being cooked. Instead, energy is transferred by waves of heat or light striking the food. Two kinds of radiation heat are used in the kitchen: infra-red and microwave.
Radiation
People asked to rank order samples of food according to a criteria.
Ranking
Follow the rules of I-tal. Food must be natural, clean and contain fruits, vegetables and herbs.
Rastafarianism
People asked to rate a food sample for a specific characteristic.
Rating
An ingredient or process that introduces a gas into a mixture so that it rises when cooked.
Raising agents
Animals, birds and fish specially bred in captivity to be eaten.
Reared ingredients
The process of simmering a liquid over heat until it thickens. It is also the name of the concentrated liquid that forms during this process.
Reduction
An estimate of the amount of proteins, vitamins and minerals that should meet the needs of most of the group to which they apply.
Reference Nutrient Intake (RNIs)
The way of life, general customs and beliefs of a particular group of people at a particular time. Relating to the core of their traditions. Dietary laws, rules and advice which dictate the type of foods to be eaten.
Religion and cultures
Deficiency of calcium in the bones, reducing peak bone mass.
Rickets
Convection-conduction, cooking foods in oil or fat in a hot oven.
Roasting
This type of fat is mostly from animal sources; they are normally solid fats. All of the carbon atoms in the fatty acid molecules are linked by single bonds.
Saturated fats
Demonstrates how science of the ingredients are at work in producing, processing, preparing, preserving, and metabolising foods.
Scientific principles
Foods that are at the stage of their natural life cycle when they are ready for harvest or to be caught.
Seasonal foods
Primary processed foods into other food products, for example flour into biscuits.
Secondary processing
To peel and pull apart, for example an orange.
Segment
Smell, appearance and texture, mouth feel influence what we select to eat.
Sensory
A way of measuring the sensory qualities of food and is used by chefs, food manufacturers and retailers to analyse a food product.
Sensory testing methods
A quick method of cooking where a small amount of fat is used to cook food in a frying pan.
Shallow frying
The ability for fat to shorten the length of the gluten molecules in pastry or shortbread, for example butter, lard or other fat that remains solid at room.
Shortening
To slice into long, thin strips.
Shred
Eastern religion in which many are vegetarian and do not drink alcohol, tea or coffee.
Sikhism
Water that is heated to just below boiling point.
Simmering
A long metal or wooden pin used to secure food on during cooking; to skewer is to hold together pieces of food using a metal or a wooden pin.
Skewer
Controls the amount of water in the body.
Sodium
An Asian bean plant.
Soya bean
To cut (usually with a pair of scissors) with a small, quick stroke.
Snip
Help stop substances separating again after they have been mixed stabilise an emulsion.
Stabilisers
A polysaccharide, a complex carbohydrate.
Starch
A method of cooking where food is cooked in the steam coming from boiling water. Conduction-convection.
Steaming
Heated in sealed bottles to 110°C for 30 seconds.
Sterilised
A quick method of cooking where small pieces of food are fast-fried in a small amount of oil in a wok.
Stir-frying
Human activity that is not harmful to the environment and does not deplete natural resources, thereby supporting long-term ecological balance. For example, sustainable fishing.
Sustainability
A glazed earthenware pot with a distinctive lid. It is also used to describe the food cooked in it.
Tagine
Special cells on the tongue that pick up flavours.
Taste receptors
A process of testing foods. The process must be fair and realistic controlled conditions.
Tasting panel
Range of temperature for the storage of food correctly.
Temperature control
Give an accurate reading of the core temperature (centre) of the food. Food probes must be used correctly.
Temperature probes
Vegetable protein, especially from soya beans, that is used as a substitute for meat, or is added to it.
Textured Vegetable Protein (TVP)
A high protein food made by coagulating soya milk and pressing the resulting curds into soft white blocks.
Tofu
The distance foods travel, measured in air miles.
Transportation
People given three samples of a food product to try. Two samples are identical, the third something is different; they need to discriminate between the samples.
Triangle test
A person with type 2 diabetes has insulin resistance, meaning their pancreas doesn't produce enough insulin or the body doesn't react properly to insulin.
Type 2 diabetes
Heated very quickly in a heat exchanger to 72°C for 15 seconds cooked rapidly to below 10°c (normally 4°C).
Ultra Heat Treatment (UHT)
Fats that contain a high ratio of fatty acid molecules with at least one double bond. Unsaturated fats are normally liquid oil.
Unsaturated fats
Date by which high risk perishable foods should be eaten. They may not look different but are unsafe.
Use by date
People who do not eat flesh or any animal products. They can eat plant protein soya, TVP, tofu.
Vegan
A lacto-vegetarian diet includes dairy products and plants, and a lacto-ovo vegetarian diet includes eggs, dairy products and nuts.
Vegetarian
Enables energy to be released from carbohydrate, fat and protein in the body found in many foods, such as milk, eggs, rice. Deficiency is rare.
Vitamin B2
Enables release of Vitamin C (ascorbic acid) needed for absorption of iron, to maintain body cells. Found in citrus fruits, green vegetables.
Vitamin B3
Works with folic acid, found in meat, fish fortified cereals.
Vitamin B12
Using liquid to transfer heat via convection.
Water based
Where liquid is suspended in oil or fat and prevents them from separating out, for example mayonnaise.
Water in oil emulsion
Soluble vitamins (the B group and vitamin C) in water of energy in the body. Found in wheat flour, eggs, milk some meats. Deficiency is called pellagra.
Water soluble vitamins
Fillings that are wrapped in soft flat breads such as tortillas or pittas.
Wraps
A microscopic fungus consisting of single oval cells that reproduce by budding, and capable of converting sugar into alcohol and CO2 gas. Also ferments in the correct conditions to make bread rise.
Yeasts
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