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acids, and whence the food is returned to the mouth for further
mastication (chewing the cud); the reticulum, where further bac-
terial fermentation produces volatile fatty acids; the omasum;
and the abomasum or true stomach. The bacterial fermentation
allows ruminants to obtain nourishment from grass and hay
which cannot be digested by monogastric animals.
rumpbone Cut of meat: (USA) = aitchbone, (UK) = loin or
haunch.
rush nut See tiger nut.
rusk (1) Sweetened biscuit or piece of bread or cake crisped in
the oven, especially as food for young children when teething.
(2) Cereal added to sausages and hamburgers.
rutabaga American name for swede.
rutin The disaccharide derivative of quercitin, containing
glucose and rhamnose.Found in grains, tomato stalk and elder-
flower. Not known to be a dietary essential or to have any func-
tion in the body.
See also flavonoids.
rye Grain of Secale cereale, the predominant cereal in some parts
of Europe; very hardy and withstands adverse conditions better
than wheat. Rye flour is dark and the dough lacks elasticity; rye
bread is usually made with sour dough or leaven rather than
yeast.
Composition/100g: water 10.9g, 1402kJ (335kcal), protein
14.8g, fat 2.5g (of which 18% saturated, 18% mono-unsaturated,
65% polyunsaturated), carbohydrate 69.8g (1g sugars), fibre
14.6g, ash 2g, Ca 33mg, Fe 2.7mg, Mg 121mg, P 374 mg, K
264mg, Na 6mg, Zn 3.7mg, Cu 0.4mg, Mn 2.7mg, Se 35.3µg,
vitamin A 1µg RE (217µg carotenoids), E 1.3mg, K 5.9mg,
B
1
0.32mg, B
2
0.25mg, niacin 4.3mg, B
6
0.29mg, folate 60µg, pan-
tothenate 1.5mg.
Ryle tube A narrow rubber tube with a blind end containing
a lead weight, with holes above this level, for removing
samples of the contents from the stomach at intervals after a test
meal.
See also rehfuss tube.
Ryvita
TM
A rye crispbread.
S
S- and R- See R- andS
saccharases Enzymes (including invertase) that hydrolyse
sugars to their constituent monosaccharides.
saccharic acid The dicarboxylic acid derived from glucose.
418
saccharimeter polarimeter used to determine the purity of sugar;
graduated on the International Sugar Scale, degrees sugar (dis-
tinct from saccharometer).
saccharin Sulphobenzimide, a synthetic sweetener, 550 times as
sweet as sucrose. Soluble saccharin is the sodium salt.
saccharometer Floating device used to determine the specific
gravity of sugar solutions (distinct from saccharimeter).
Saccharomyces bulardii See probiotics.
saccharose See sucrose.
sachertorte Austrian; chocolate sponge cake with rich chocolate
icing and whipped cream.
sack Old name for various white wines from Spain and the
Canaries, e.g. sherry.
safe allowances, level of intake See reference intakes.
safe and adequate intake Where there is inadequate scientific evi-
dence to establish requirements and reference intakes for a
nutrient for which deficiency is rarely seen, if ever, the observed
levels of intake are assumed to be greater than requirements, and
thus provide an estimate of intakes that are safe and (more than)
adequate to meet needs.
safflower Oil extracted from the seeds of Carthamus tinctoria.
Mexican saffron is a substitute for saffron made from the
stigmata.
Linoleic safflower oil is 7% saturated, 15% mono-unsaturated,
78% polyunsaturated; oleic safflower oil is 7% saturated, 78%
mono-unsaturated, 15% polyunsaturated; both contain 34.1mg
vitamin E, and 7.1mg vitamin K/100g.
saffron Deep orange-red powder from the powdered stigmata of
the saffron crocus, Crocus sativus; 1g requires stigmata of 1500
flowers and yields about 50mg of extract. Used as natural
dyestuff (permitted food colour, with no E-number) and spice.
Very soluble in water. Indian saffron is turmeric; Mexican
saffron is safflower.
sage Leaf of the Dalmatian sage, Salvia officinalis; fragrant and
spicy, used to flavour meat and fish dishes and in poultry stuff-
ing. Other sages (Greek, Spanish, English) differ in flavour from
the Dalmatian variety.
sago Starchy grains prepared from the pith of the swamp sago
(Metroxylon sagu) and the sugar palm (Arenga pinnuta); almost
pure starch.
saithe A white fish, Polachius virens, also known as coley and
coal fish.
saké Japanese fermented beverage made from rice; although
commonly called rice wine, it is technically a beer, since it is made
419
from a cereal, although it does not contain gas. The fungus
Aspergillus oryzae (Koji) is used as a source of amylase, then
yeast is added; the final product contains 14–20% alcohol.
salad dressing Emulsions of oil and vinegar, which may or not
contain other flavourings. French dressing (vinaigrette) is a tem-
porary emulsion of oil and vinegar; heavy French dressing is sta-
bilised with pectin or vegetable gum.
Mayonnaise is a stable emulsion of vinegar in oil, made with
egg. Salad cream was originally developed as a commercial sub-
stitute for mayonnaise (mid-19th century); an emulsion made
from vegetable oil, vinegar, salt, spices, emulsified with egg yolk
and thickened. Legally, in the UK, must contain not less than
25% by weight of vegetable oil and not less than 1.35% egg yolk
solids. Mayonnaise usually contains more oil, less carbohydrate
and water.
By US regulations salad dressing contains 30% vegetable oil
and 4% egg yolk; mayonnaise contains 65% oil plus egg yolk.
Red mayonnaise is prepared by adding beetroot juice and the
coral (eggs) of lobster to mayonnaise; an accompaniment to
lobster and other seafood dishes. Russian dressing is in fact
American; made from mayonnaise with pimento, chilli sauce,
green pepper and celery, or sometimes by mixing mayonnaise
with tomato ketchup. Thousand Island dressing is made from
equal parts of mayonnaise and Russian dressing, with whipped
cream.
salamander Traditional round metal cooking implement, heated
in the fire until red hot and held over the surface of pastry and
other foods to brown it.
salami Type of sausage speckled with pieces of fat, flavoured with
garlic; originally Italian.
salatrims Family of triacylglycerols prepared from hydrogenated
soy or canola oil and short-chain triacylglycerols by inter-
esterification; only partially absorbed. The name derives from
short and long-chain acid triacylglycerol molecules.
salep, salepi Turkish, Greek; beverage prepared from orchid
tubers. Milky white in appearance, with only a slight flavour.
sal fat Vegetable butter prepared from seeds of the Indian sal tree
(Shorea robusta).
See also cocoa butter equivalents
saline See physiological saline.
salinometer (salimeter, salometer) Hydrometer to measure con-
centration of salt solutions by density.
Salisbury steak American; similar to hamburger, minced beef
mixed with bread, eggs, milk and seasoning, shaped into cakes
and fried.
420
saliva Secretion of the salivary glands in the mouth: 1–1.5L
secreted daily. A dilute solution of the protein mucin (which
lubricates food) and the enzyme amylase, with small quantities
of urea, and mineral salts.
salivary glands Three pairs of glands in the mouth, which secrete
saliva: parotid, submandibular and submaxillary glands.
Sally Lunn A sweet, spongy, yeast cake, named after a girl who
sold her tea cakes in Bath in the 18th century. In southern USA
a variety of yeast and soda breads.
salmagundi (salamagundi) Old English dish consisting of diced
fresh and salt meats mixed with hard-boiled eggs, pickled veg-
etables and spices, arranged on a bed of salad.
salmine See protamines.
salmon Fish of a number of species including Atlantic salmon
(Salmo salar), and chinook, chum, coho (or silver), pink (or
humpback), sockeye (or red) which are Oncorhynchus spp., and
in UK must be described as red or pink salmon. Although wild
salmon are caught on a large scale, much is farmed in deep inlets
of the sea.
Composition/100g: water 69g, 766kJ (183kcal), protein 19.9g,
fat 10.9g (of which 22% saturated, 39% mono-unsaturated, 39%
polyunsaturated), cholesterol 59mg, carbohydrate 0g, ash 1g,
Ca 12mg, Fe 0.4mg, Mg 28mg, P 233mg, K 362mg, Na 59mg, Zn
0.4mg, Se 36.5µg, vitamin A 15µg RE (15µg retinal), B
1
0.34mg,
B
2
0.12mg, niacin 7.5mg, B
6
0.64mg, folate 26µg, B
12
2.8µg, pan-
tothenate 1.4mg, C 4mg. A 100g serving is a source of folate, a
good source of P, vitamin B
1
, pantothenate, a rich source of Se,
niacin, vitamin B
6
,B
12
.
salmon berry Fruit of American wild raspberry, Ribes spectabilis.
Salmonella spp. Bacteria (Enterobacteriaceae) that are a
common cause of food poisoning. Found in eggs from infected
hens, sausages, etc.; can survive in brine and at refrigerator tem-
peratures; destroyed by adequate heating. Most species invade
intestinal epithelial cells. Infective dose 10
3
–10
6
organisms, onset
6–72h, duration 2–7 days, TX 4.1.2.2.
Salmonella enterica serovars Typhi and Paratyphi (formerly S.
typhi and S. paratyphi) cause systemic infection: infective dose
1–10
2
organisms, onset 10–21 days, duration weeks.
There was a large increase in salmonellosis in Britain in the
1980s when S. enteritidis became endemic in poultry, levelling off
in 1990–1995. Subsequently there was an increase (also in USA)
in S. typhimurium DT with a relatively high mortality. Found in
cereals, beef, pork and chicken.
salmon, rock Alternative name for dogfish.
salometer See salinometer.
421
salsify (oyster plant, vegetable oyster) Long, white, tapering root
of the biennial plant Tragopogon porrifolius.
Composition/100g: (edible portion 87%) water 77g, 343kJ
(82kcal), protein 3.3g, fat 0.2g, carbohydrate 18.6g, fibre 3.3g,
ash 0.9g, Ca 60mg, Fe 0.7mg, Mg 23 mg, P 75mg, K 380mg, Na
20mg, Zn 0.4mg, Cu 0.1mg, Mn 0.3mg, Se 0.8µg, vitamin B
1
0.08mg, B
2
0.22mg, niacin 0.5mg, B
6
0.28mg, folate 26µg,
pantothenate 0.4mg, C 8mg.
Black salsify is very similar; hardy perennial, Scorzonera his-
panica (sometimes used roasted as coffee substitute).
salt Usually refers to sodium chloride, common salt or table salt
(chemically any product of reaction between an acid and an
alkali is a salt). The main sources are either mining in areas
where there are rich deposits of crystalline salt, or evaporation
of seawater in shallow pans (known as sea salt).
See also buffers; sodium.
salt-free diets Diets low in sodium, for the treatment of hyper-
tension and other conditions. Most of the sodium of the diet is
consumed as sodium chloride or salt, and hence such diets are
referred to as salt-restricted or low-salt diets, or sometimes ‘salt-
free’, to emphasise that no salt is added to foods in preparation
or at the table. Since foods naturally contain sodium chloride, a
truly salt-free diet is not possible. It is the sodium and not the
chloride that is important.
See also hypertension; salt, light.
salting Method of preserving meat, fish and some vegetables
using salt and saltpetre.
salt, light (lite) Mixtures of sodium chloride with potassium and
ammonium chlorides together with citrates, formates, phos-
phates, glutamates, as well as herbs and spices and/or other sub-
stances to reduce the intake of sodium and improve the
palatability of salt-free diets.
saltpetre (Bengal saltpetre) Potassium nitrate.
salts, Indian Ancient Greek and Roman name for sugar.
sambal goring See trassi.
SAMI Socially acceptable monitoring instrument. A small
heart-rate-counting apparatus used to estimate energy expendi-
ture of human subjects.
samna Clarified butter fat, see butter; ghee.
samosa Indian; deep-fried stuffed pancakes, rolled into a cone or
folded into an envelope.
samp Coarsely cut portions of maize with bran and germ partly
removed.
See also hominy.
422
samphire (1) Rock samphire, St Peter’s herb, succulent plant of
cliffs and salt marshes (Crithmum maritimum); grows on coastal
rocks, fleshy aromatic leaves may be eaten raw, boiled or pickled.
(2) Marsh samphire (glasswort, sea asparagus), Salicornia
spp., grows in salt marshes, salty, eaten cooked as a vegetable.
samso Danish hard cheese.
Sanatogen
TM
A preparation of casein and sodium glycerophos-
phate for consumption as a beverage when added to milk.
sanding In sugar confectionery, coating with sugar crystals, used
mainly on jellies.
sand leek See rocambole.
sandwich Two slices of bread enclosing a filling (meat, cheese,
fish, etc.). Invention attributed to the fourth Earl of Sandwich
(1718–1792), who spent long periods at the gaming table and
carried a portable meal of beef sandwiched with bread. Decker
sandwiches consist of several layers of bread, each separated by
filling; Neapolitan sandwiches are decker sandwiches made with
alternating slices of white and brown bread. Open sandwiches
(smørrebrød) consist of a single slice of bread, biscuit or small
roll.
Sanecta
TM
See aspartame.
Sanka
TM
Decaffeinated instant coffee. See caffeine; coffee.
sapodilla Fruit of the sapodilla tree (Achras sapota); size of a
small apple, rough-grained, yellow to greyish pulp. Chicle, the
basis of chewing gum, is made from the latex of the tree.
Composition/100g: (edible portion 80%) water 78g, 347kJ
(83kcal), protein 0.4g, fat 1.1g, carbohydrate 20g, fibre 5.3g, ash
0.5g, Ca 21mg, Fe 0.8mg, Mg 12mg, P 12mg, K 193mg, Na 12mg,
Zn 0.1mg, Cu 0.1mg, Se 0.6µg, vitamin A 3µg RE, B
2
0.02mg,
niacin 0.2mg, B
6
0.04mg, folate 14µg, pantothenate 0.3mg, C
15mg.An 85g serving (half fruit) is a good source of vitamin C.
saponification Alkaline hydrolysis of fatty acid esters (including
triacylglycerols) prior to analysis. The saponification value of
a fat or oil is the amount of potassium hydroxide required to
hydrolyse (saponify) 1g of the fat.
saponins Group of substances that occur in plants and can
produce a soapy lather with water. Extracted commercially
from soapwort (Saponaria officinalis) or soapbark (Quillaja
saponaria) and used as foam producer in beverages and fire
extinguishers, as detergents and for emulsifying oils. Bitter in
flavour.
See also quillaja.
sapote Fruit of the central American sub-tropical evergreen tree
Casimiroa edulis.
423
Composition/100g: (edible portion 71%) water 62.4g, 561 kJ
(134kcal), protein 2.1g, fat 0.6 g, carbohydrate 33.8g, fibre 2.6g,
ash 1.1g, Ca 39mg, Fe 1mg, Mg 30 mg, P 28mg, K 344mg, Na
10mg, vitamin A 21µg RE, B
1
0.01mg, B
2
0.02mg, niacin 1.8mg,
C 20mg. A 110g serving (half fruit) is a source of Mg, niacin, a
rich source of vitamin C.
See also mamey.
sapsago Swiss cheese made from soured skimmed milk and whole
milk; clover is added to the curd, giving it a green colour.
saracen corn See buckwheat.
saran Generic name for thermoplastic materials made from poly-
mers of vinylidene chloride and vinyl chloride. They are clear
transparent films (cling film) used for wrapping food; resistant to
oils and chemicals; can be heat-shrunk onto the product.
sarcolactic acid Obsolete name for (+)lactic acid (which rotates
the plane of polarised light to the right), found in muscle, as dis-
tinct from the optically inactive lactic acid (a mixture of (+) and
(−) isomers) found in sour milk. Also known as paralactic acid.
See also meat conditioning; meat, dfd; rigor mortis.
sarcolemma See muscle.
sarcomere The basic contractile unit of striated muscle.
sarcosine N-Methylglycine, an intermediate in the metabolism of
choline.Found in relatively large amounts in starfish and sea
urchins, used as an intermediate in the synthesis of antienzyme
agents in toothpaste.
sardell See anchovy.
sardine Young pilchard Sardina (Clupea) pilchardus; commonly
canned in oil, brine or tomato paste. Norwegian canned sardines
are salted and smoked before canning; French are salted and
steamed.
Saridele Protein-rich baby food (26–30% protein) developed in
Indonesia; extract of soya bean with sugar, calcium carbonate,
vitamins B
1
,B
12
and C.
sarsaparilla (1) Flavour prepared from oil of sassafras and oil
of wintergreen or oil of sweet birch.
(2) Roots of a south American plant (Smilax officinalis).
Both used to flavour the beverage called sarsaparilla.
sassafras American tree (Sassafras albidum) with aromatic bark
and leaves. The root is used to make root beer and the young
leaves are powdered to make filé powder, an essential flavour-
ing of gumbo. Sassafras oil from the root bark is used medicinally
and as a flavour in beverages, but banned in some countries
because of its toxicity.
satiety The sensation of fullness after a meal.
satsuma See citrus.
424
saturates Commonly used term for saturated fatty acids.
saturation analysis See radioimmunoassay.
saturation humidity See humidity.
saturation temperature See dew point.
sauerkraut German, Dutch, Alsatian; prepared by lactic fermen-
tation of shredded cabbage. In the presence of 2–3% salt, acid-
forming bacteria thrive and convert sugars in the cabbage into
acetic and lactic acids, which then act as preservatives.
sauermilchkase German cheeses made from low-fat milk using a
lactic acid starter and no rennet.
sauerteig See bread.
sausage Chopped meat, commonly beef or pork, seasoned with
salt and spices, mixed with cereal (usually wheat rusk prepared
from crumbed unleavened biscuits) and packed into casings (see
sausage casings). In UK pork sausages must be at least 65%
meat and beef sausages 50% meat.
Six main types: fresh, smoked, cooked, smoked and cooked,
semi-dry and dry. Frankfurters, Bologna, Polish and Berliner
sausages are made from cured meat and are smoked and cooked.
Thuringer, soft salami, mortadella and soft cervelat are semi-dry
sausages. Pepperoni, chorizos, dry salami, dry cervelat are slowly
dried to a hard texture.
sausage casings Natural casings are made from hog intestines for
fresh frying sausages, and from sheep intestines for chipolatas
and frankfurters, now mainly replaced by artificial casings made
from cellulose, polyvinyl dichloride or collagen. Skinless
sausages are prepared in cellulose casing, which is then peeled
off.
sausage factor See meat factor.
sausages, emulsion Also known as bratwurst. Sausages made
from a meat mixture that is finely chopped with added water and
salt. Much of the fat is liberated but remains emulsified by the
lean meat mixture, giving a homogeneous paste (known in
German as brat) that gels to a firm sliceable mass on heating.
savarin See baba.
saveloy Highly seasoned smoked sausage; the addition of saltpe-
tre gives rise to the bright red colour. Originally a sausage made
from pig brains.
savory Herb with strongly flavoured leaves used as seasoning in
sauces, soups, salad dishes. Summer savory is an annual, Satureja
hortensis; winter savory is a perennial, S. montana.
savoy Variety of cabbage (Brassica oleracea var. capitata) with
crimped leaves.
saw palmetto North American palm (Serenoa repens, S. serrulata);
the berries were eaten by native Americans, and there is some
425
evidence that the oil (which contains sterols) may have benefi-
cial effects in treatment of benign prostate enlargement.
Saxin
TM
See saccharin.
sbrinz Swiss hard cheese similar to parmesan.
SCADA Supervisory control and data acquisition; software to
display data from monitoring of manufacturing processes as real-
time graphics, developed in the 1980s. Now superseded by open
database connectivity (ODBC) and object linking exchange
(OLE) software.
scald (1) Pouring boiling water over a food to clean it, loosen
hairs (e.g. on a joint of pork) or remove the skin of fruit and
tomatoes.
See also blanching.
(2) Heating milk almost to boiling point, to retard souring or
to make clotted cream.
(3) Defect occurring in stored apples; the formation of brown
patches under the skin, with browning and softening of the tissue
underneath. Due to accumulation of gases given off during
ripening.
scaldfish See megrim.
scallion Small onion which has not developed a bulb, widely used
in Chinese cooking; also used for shallots and spring onion (espe-
cially in USA).
scallops Marine bivalve molluscs, species of the Pectinidae
family; Queen scallop is Chamys opercularis.
Composition/100g: water 79g, 368kJ (88kcal), protein 16.8g,
fat 0.8g, cholesterol 33 mg,carbohydrate 2.4g, ash 1.5g,Ca 24mg,
Fe 0.3mg, Mg 56mg, P 219mg, K 322 mg, Na 161mg, Zn 0.9mg,
Cu 0.1mg, Mn 0.1mg, Se 22.2µg, I 20µg, vitamin A 15µg retinol,
K 0.1mg, B
1
0.01mg, B
2
0.06mg, niacin 1.1mg, B
6
0.15mg, folate
16µg, B
12
1.5µg, pantothenate 0.1mg, C 3mg. A 60 g serving is a
source of Mg, P, Se, a rich source of vitamin B
12
.
scampi Shellfish, Norway lobster or Dublin Bay prawn, Nephrops
norvegicus. See lobster.
scapula The shoulder blade, a triangular bone.
Scenedesmus See algae.
Schiff base An aldimine linkage formed by condensation
between an aldehyde and an amino group.
See also maillard reaction; pyridoxyllysine.
Schilling test For vitamin b
12
absorption; an oral dose of
57
Co-
labelled vitamin B
12
is given 1h after a large (1000µg) parenteral
dose of non-radioactive vitamin, and radioactivity in urine is
determined over the next 24 hours.
See also anaemia, pernicious; intrinsic factor.
schnitzel Austrian, German; cutlet or escalope of veal or pork.
426
Schoenheimer–Sperry reaction A modification of the lieber-
mann–burchard reaction for cholesterol.
scifers Cornish name for Welsh onion (see onion, welsh).
scintillation counter Instrument for measurement of radioactiv-
ity by emission of light from a solid or liquid scintillator that
emits a photon after absorbing a β-particle or γ-ray.
sclerosis Hardening of tissue due to scarring, inflammation or
ageing.
See also arteriosclerosis; atherosclerosis.
scolex Head of a tapeworm, with hooks or suckers to permit
attachment to the intestinal wall.
scombroid poisoning Apparently caused by bacterial spoilage of
fish including many of the Scombridae (tuna, bonito, mackerel)
but also non-scombroid fish and other foods. Symptoms (includ-
ing skin rash, nausea, tingling) resemble histamine poisoning and
were previously thought to be due to bacterial formation of
histamine, now doubted.
scone A variety of tea cake originally made from white flour or
barley meal and sour milk or buttermilk in Scone, Scotland;
baked on a griddle and cut in quarters. Drop scone is a small
pancake made by dropping batter onto a griddle.
scorbutic See scurvy.
scorzonera See salsify.
Scotch egg Hard-boiled egg cased in seasoned sausage meat and
breadcrumbs, fried and served cold.
scotopic Conditions of poor illumination; hence scotopic vision is
vision in dim light (see dark adaptation).
SCP See single cell protein.
scrapple USA; meat dish prepared from pork carcass trimmings,
maize meal, flour, salt and spices, cooked to a thick consistency.
scratchings, pork Small pieces of crisply cooked pork skin.
screening (1) Sorting of foods or food particles by size using
sieves (known as screens).
(2) Comparison of measurements made on individuals or
population groups using predetermined risk levels or cut-off
points of reference ranges.
scrod Young cod or haddock.
scrumpy Rough, unsweetened cider.
scup American term for various foodand game fish of the sea
bream family, especially Senostomus spp.
See also porgy.
scurvy Deficiency of vitamin c, fatal if untreated. Nowadays
extremely rare, but in the past a major problem in winter, when
there were few sources of the vitamin available. It was especially
a problem of long sea voyages during the 16th and 17th centuries;
427
[...]... ulcers SucraloseTM Chlorinated sucrose (trichlorogalactosucrose); 2000 times as sweet as sucrose, stable to heat and acid sucrase (sucrase-isomaltase) See invertase sucrol See dulcin SucronTM Mixture of saccharin and sucrose, four times as sweet as sucrose alone sucrose Cane or beet sugar A disaccharide, glucosyl-fructose sucrose distearate See sucrose esters sucrose esters Di- and trilaurates and mono-... and distearates of sucrose Used as emulsifiers, wetting agents and surface active agents, e.g for washing fruits and vegetables, as antispattering agents, antifoam agents and antistaling or crumb-softening agents (E-473) See also sucrose polyesters sucrose intolerance See disaccharide intolerance sucrose monostearate See sucrose esters sucrose polyesters (SPE) Mixtures of hexa- hepta- and octaesters... polyunsaturated, and contains 10% non-saponifiable lipids See also cocoa butter equivalents shearling 15–18-month-old sheep See lamb shear rate The velocity gradient in a liquid subjected to a shear stress For Newtonian fluids there is a linear relationship between shear stress and shear rate; non-Newtonian fluids (which include many emulsions, suspensions and concentrated solutions of starches, gums and. .. light Causes gastrointestinal disturbances and neurological disorders; the upper acceptable limit is 20 mg solanine per 100 g fresh weight of potato sole flatfish, Solea spp.; Dover sole is S solea solera See sherry solids-not-fat (SNF) Refers to the solids of milk excluding the fat, i.e protein, lactose and salts Used as an index of milk quality, determined by measuring the specific gravity using the... and stearate (E-570), methyl-, methylethyl- and sodium carboxymethyl-celluloses (E-466), stearyl tartrate (E-483), sorbitan esters of fatty acids (E491–495) Bread may contain only superglycerinated fats and stearyl tartrate See Table 7 of the Appendix See also emulsifiers stachyose Tetrasaccharide,galactosyl-galactosyl-glucosyl-fructose; not hydrolysed in the small intestine, and a substrate for bacterial... and generally resulting in life-long short stature A common effect of protein–energy malnutrition, and associated especially with inadequate protein intake See also anthropometry; harvard standards; nchs standards; nutritional status assessment; tanner standards; waterlow classification sturgeon White fish, Acipenser spp The roe is the source of caviar sublimation A change in state of directly from solid... has defined serving or portion sizes, based on surveys of amounts customarily eaten, so that definitions of portions are not left to the manufacturer sesame A tropical and subtropical plant, Sesamum indicum Known as sim-sim in E Africa, benniseed in W Africa, gingelly and til in Asia Seeds are small and, in most varieties, white; used whole in sweetmeats, in stews and to decorate cakes and bread, and. .. leaves are used in W Africa as a source of proteolytic milk-clotting enzymes as an alternative to rennet in cheese production soft swell See swells sol Colloidal suspension (see colloid) consisting of a solid dispersed in a liquid In lyophobic sols there is little interaction between the dispersed particles and the dispersing medium; in lyophilic sols there is affinity between the dispersed and dispersant... spores are a resting state, resistant to heat, which can germinate to produce bacteria under suitable conditions Spore formation only occurs in some species, when the organism encounters adverse conditions (e.g dryness, lack of nutrients) 444 Spore-forming species, especially of Bacillus and Clostridium, are a health hazard because the spores are resistant to most sterilisation techniques sports drinks... pancakes prepared at the table or rolled and deep fried Also known as pancake rolls and Imperial rolls; loempia in Indonesian, and nem in Vietnamese, cuisine sprouts (1) See brussels sprouts (2) See bean sprouts spruce beer Western Canada; branches, bark and cones of black spruce (Picea mariana) boiled for several hours, then put in a cask with molasses, hops and yeast, and allowed to ferment sprue, . relationship between
shear stress and shear rate; non-Newtonian fluids (which include
many emulsions, suspensions and concentrated solutions of
starches, gums and. Herb with strongly flavoured leaves used as seasoning in
sauces, soups, salad dishes. Summer savory is an annual, Satureja
hortensis; winter savory is a perennial,