Food Chemistry image

Food Chemistry (Paperback)

by MEYERS

Total: TK. 891

  • Look inside image 1
  • Look inside image 2
  • Look inside image 3
  • Look inside image 4
  • Look inside image 5
  • Look inside image 6
  • Look inside image 7
  • Look inside image 8
  • Look inside image 9
  • Look inside image 10
  • Look inside image 11
  • Look inside image 12
  • Look inside image 13
  • Look inside image 14
  • Look inside image 15
  • Look inside image 16
  • Look inside image 17
Food Chemistry

1st Edition, 2004

Food Chemistry (Paperback)

2 Ratings  |  No Review
TK. 891
in-stock icon In Stock (only 1 copy left)

* স্টক আউট হওয়ার আগেই অর্ডার করুন

Book Length

book-length-icon

385 Pages

Edition

editon-icon

1st Edition

ISBN

isbn-icon

9788123911496

book-icon

বই হাতে পেয়ে মূল্য পরিশোধের সুযোগ

mponey-icon

৭ দিনের মধ্যে পরিবর্তনের সুযোগ

Customers Also Bought

Product Specification & Summary

CHAPTER ONE

Development of Food Chemistry

THE ORIGINS OF SCIENCE go back to prehistory when man could not write a record of his successes and his failures, his trials and experiments, and his traditions. We assume that as man emerged as a thinking animal he began to explore the world around him, to wonder at its operation, and finally to try to control it.
Consequently, it seems that as the centuries roll by man's understanding and control of his environment, although still incom- plete, continue to improve. In the early days every science had a tenuous start-even one as dependent on the development of mathematics and lab- oratory procedures as chemistry. At this time man had learned only a few chemical skills, some of which were in food chemistry.
Probably they were accidently discovered, then carefully passed on from one generation to another so that by the time writing was invented man could not only make pottery and soap, cook food, and smelt a few metals but also make wine and vinegar. These processes were hedged around with superstitions, but the vintner could control the process; although he had never heard of a yeast or an Acetobacter, he knew how to handle the fermenting fruit.
In the seventeenth century, as laboratory procedures and an apprecia- tion of the scientific method developed and as scientists began to ex- change information, chemistry began to emerge as a true science. A con- siderable accumulation of information and a beginning study of foods reflected the general interest in the composition of the entire world.
Some of the early experiments attempted to separate food components, to study the pigments that give color to the world, or to find the "life-giving" compound. As time passed these studies were successful to a limited extent. In the eighteenth century simple compounds were isolated, and during the first half of the nineteenth century the old idea that the living and the nonliving world were completely different was abandoned.
Title Food Chemistry
Author
Publisher
ISBN 9788123911496
Edition 1st Edition, 2004
Number of Pages 385
Country India
Language English

Similar Category Best Selling Books

Sponsored Products Related To This Item

Reviews and Ratings

5.0

2 Ratings and 0 Review

sort icon

Product Q/A

Have a question regarding the product? Ask Us

Show more Question(s)
prize book-reading point

Recently Sold Products

Recently Viewed
cash

Cash on delivery

Pay cash at your doorstep

service

Delivery

All over Bangladesh

return

Happy return

7 days return facility

0 Item(s)

Subtotal:

Customers Also Bought

Are you sure to remove this from book shelf?

Food Chemistry