Category Science & Technology

When was yeast first used in baking?

Thousands of years ago, the Egyptians discovered that it was the yeast which made bread rise and so they were the first people to produce a ‘yeast-raised’ bread.

Yeast is a one-celled plant, so small that it cannot be seen without a microscope. As yeast plants grow and reproduce, they form two substances called ‘enzymes’, invertase and zymase. These enzymes help to change starch to sugar and sugar to alcohol, carbon dioxide and energy.

This energy producing process is called ‘fermentation’. The carbon dioxide formed is a gas which man may use in a number of ways; one of which is baking, particularly bread.

Modern breadmakers add yeast and sugar to the dough as they make it. The starch and sugar in the bread dough serve as food for the yeast. Carbon dioxide is given off and forms bubbles inside the loaf. Heat from the oven causes the gas to expand. This makes the bread rise even more. Finally, the heat drives off the carbon dioxide, and it leaves a light, dry loaf.

Fact File

The first bread was made in Neolithic times, nearly 12,000 years ago, probably of coarsely crushed grain mixed with water, with the resulting dough probably laid on heated stones and baked by covering with hot ashes.

 

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When did the canning of food and drink first start?

People had been trying for thousands of years to find better ways to preserve food for a long time. The first patent for a ‘tin canister’ for preserving food was granted in England to Peter Durand in 1810. He got the idea from the canisters in which tea was packed. In America, the name became shortened to ‘tin can’, and the industry was called ‘canning’, while in England it is known as ‘tinning’.

The first cannery in the United States was one for fish, and was started by Ezra Dagget in New York City in 1819. Heinz & Company began producing baked beans in tomato sauce at Richmond, Victoria on October 1, 1935. To cam a food successfully, it must be heated enough to kill the organism (moulds, yeasts, bacteria) that may cause fresh food to spoil; the tin can or glass jar must be free from germs and it must be sealed air-tight.

Fact File

In 1810 the French chef called Nicholas Appert discovered a way of preserving food by packing food into wide-mouth bottles. He sealed the bottles and then lowered them into a boiler filled with hot water. A lid was put on, so that the bottles would heat in their boiling water bath. Some foods, fruit and vegetables in particular, may also be preserved by pickling then stored in jars.

 

When was the first electric lamp in use?

An American inventor, Thomas A. Edison invented the first workable electric lamp in 1879. In the late 1800s electric lamps began to replace gas ones.

On October 21, 1879, Edison created a lamp containing a carbonized thread for the filament. The lamp burned steadily for two days.

The first commercial installation of Edison’s lamp was made in May 1880 on the steamship Columbia. In 1881 a New York City factory was lit with Edison’s system, and the commercial success of the incandescent lamp was quickly established.

Fact File

In a modern electric light bulb, a current is passed through a very thin filament of metal that has a high resistance to the flow of electricity. The filament becomes white hot and produces light. The bulb contains an inert gas o the filament will not burn.

 

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When do we see the spectrum of light?

Sir Isaac Newton of Cambridge University in England, first uncovered the secrets of how light is divided up. We think of ordinary light as being ‘white’, but really light is a mixture of red, orange, yellow, green, blue and violet. When sunlight strikes the bevelled edge of a mirror, or the edge of a glass prism, or the surface of a soap bubble, we can see the different hues in the light. What actually happens is that the white light is broken up into the different wave lengths that are seen by our eyes. These wave lengths form a band of parallel stripes, each hue grading into the one next to it. This band is called a ‘spectrum’. In a spectrum the red line is always at one end and the blue violet lines at the other.

Fact File

Sir Isaac Newton used his discoveries about light to build a new kind of telescope. It used a reflecting mirror instead of glass lenses to magnify images.

 

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When was lightning first understood?

Ben Franklin (1706-1790) was an American with many talents. He was a printer, scientist and politician who played an important part in founding the United States.

He discovered the nature of lightning while flying a kite during a thunderstorm. Franklin noticed sparks jumping from a key tied to the end of the wet string. This could very easily have killed him, but it did not. He went on to invent the lightning conductor, a strip of copper that is run from the top of a building to the ground in order that lightning can earth itself safely.

Lightning is a significant weather hazard and occurs at an average rate of 50 to 100 discharges per second. Lightning rods and metallic conductors can be used to protect a structure by intercepting and diverting the lightning current into the ground as harmlessly as possible. When lightning is likely to occur, people are advised to stay indoors or in a car, away from open doors and windows and to avoid contact with any electrical appliances or plumbing that might be exposed to the outside environment.

Fact File

A lightning conductor is a metal rod that is placed so that it points upwards above the highest point of a tall building. If lightning does strike the building, it is the conductor, not the building itself, that the spark hits.

 

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When does lightning strike?

To understand exactly what lightning is, we must recall a fact we know about electricity. We know that things become electrically charged – either positively or negatively. A positive charge has a great attraction for a negative one. As the charges become greater, this attraction becomes stronger. A point is finally reached where the strain of being kept apart becomes too great for the charges. A discharge takes place to relieve the strain and make the two bodies electrically equal. This is exactly what happens in the case of lightning. This discharge follows the path which offers the least resistance. That is the reason why lightning often zigzags. Moist air is only a fair conductor of electricity which is why lightning often stops when it starts raining.

Fact File

The electrical nature of the nervous system was discovered after Italian scientist Galvani noticed how frogs’ legs twitched when an electrical current was applied to the nerve.

 

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