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GCSE Chemistry Practice Test: Vegetable Oils - Sources and Uses
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Avg score: 82% Most missed: “Hardening vegetable oils involves adding an element to the oil. What element?”
Rapeseed plants produce very nutritious, oil-rich seeds and are the third largest source of vegetable oil in the world behind soyabean oil and palm oil. Some fruits, seeds and nuts are rich in oils that can be extracted. To extract the oil, the plant material is first crushed. In some cases, for example the manufacture of olive oil or walnut oil, squeezing the fruits or nuts in a press is sufficient to obtain the oil. In other cases this does not work very well, so the oil needs to be dissolved in a solvent. The solvent can then be distilled off, leaving the vegetable oil behind. Plant... Show more
GCSE Chemistry Practice Test: Vegetable Oils - Sources and Uses
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10 Questions

1. Pick the method that is NOT used to extract oils from seeds, nuts or fruits.
2. Mayonnaise, ice cream and milk are all examples of...
3. Vegetable oils can be hardened to be solids. What is this process called?
4. Hardening vegetable oils involves adding an element to the oil. What element?
5. What do unsaturated vegetable oils tend to be like?
6. What conditions are required for the hardening of vegetable oils to take place?
7. Where are vegetable oils found?
8. Vegetable oils have higher boiling points than water. What effect does this have on food cooked in oil?
9. How can we detect chemically if an oil is unsaturated?
10. An emulsifier molecule has two 'ends'. Pick the correct descriptions for these two 'ends'.