QUESTION IMAGE
Question
mini lab: the starch test
problem
which foods contain starch? observe the results of adding lugol’s solution to different foods
materials (per group of two)
lugol’s solution dropper 5 test tubes test tube rack
soda cracker potato white bread oatmeal
granulated sugar
procedure
- place pieces of a soda cracker into a test tube.
- add 5 drops of lugol’s solution to the test tube. lugol’s solution is a test for starch. if the solution turns dark blue or black, starch is present. record your observations.
- repeat the procedure using small amounts of peeled potato, white bread, oatmeal, and granulated sugar.
data collection
analyze and conclude
- of the foods you tested, which contain starch? which do not contain starch?
- why might this procedure not indicate starch in a dark colored food, such as a graham cracker?
Brief Explanations
- Based on standard biological test results for starch with Lugol's solution:
- Foods with starch will react with Lugol's solution to turn dark blue/black. Soda crackers, potato, white bread, and oatmeal are all high in starchy carbohydrates, so they will produce this positive reaction.
- Granulated sugar is a simple sugar (monosaccharide, glucose/fructose) with no starch, so it will not react with the solution.
- Lugol's solution indicates starch by changing to a dark blue or black color. Dark-colored foods already have a dark natural hue, which masks or makes it impossible to clearly observe the color change that signals the presence of starch.
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- Foods containing starch: Soda cracker, potato, white bread, oatmeal
Foods not containing starch: Granulated sugar
- The dark natural color of the food would mask the dark blue/black color change that indicates starch is present, making the result unobservable.