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Purpose:
The fats people eat can come from either plants or animals. Fats from plants and
animals are
similar in some ways but different in others. In the activity below, you can do
some simple
experiments to learn some fat facts!

Materials:
• Tablespoon of butter
• Tablespoon of vegetable oil
• Brown paper bag
• Wax paper
• Blunt-end scissors
• Water
• Masking tape
• Plastic straw
• 3 zip-closing plastic bags
• 2 clear plastic cups
• Cotton swabs
• Bowl
• Ballpoint pen

Procedures:
1. Cover your work surface with newspaper. Use your masking tape and pen to
label three zipclosing plastic bags water, butter, and oil. Ask your adult
partner to pour hot tap water into a
bowl until it is about 1/2 full. Place about 1 tablespoon of butter, vegetable
oil, and water into
their labeled bags.
2. Make sure all three bags are sealed. Place the bags in the bowl of hot water
and leave them
there until the butter becomes liquid.
3. Place a piece of a brown paper bag flat on your work surface. Use your pencil
to divide the
paper into three sections. Label the sections water, butter, and oil.
4. Dip a separate cotton swab into the liquid in each bag and place the wet end
of the swab on
its labeled area on the paper. Reseal the bags and put them back into the water.
Go on to the
next step; we'll come back to these cotton swabs later.
5. Tape a piece of wax paper flat on your newspaper. Use separate straws to
place a drop of
water, a drop of oil, and a drop of butter on the wax paper. Observe each drop
for similarities
and differences. Try dragging each drop along the paper with a straw. What do
you observe?
6. Again on your wax paper, use a straw to try mixing a few drops of oil with a
few drops of
water. Try the same thing with butter and water. How well did they mix? Now try
mixing some oil
and butter. Did they mix any better?
7. Pour cold tap water into a bowl until it is about 1/4filled. Pour about 1/2
the butter and about
1/2 the oil from their bags into separate small plastic cups. Place the cups in
the water and hold
them there so they do not spill. What do you notice happening to either the
butter or the oil?
8. Let's look back at your brown paper bag. Do you see any similarities or
differences in the way
the liquids look on the brown paper? Do the butter and oil marks look similar,
or does either one
look like the water?
9. Fill 2 clear plastic cups about 2/3 full of tap water. Pour the rest of the
oil into one cup and the
rest of the butter into the other cup. What did you observe about each liquid?
How are they
similar or different?
Think about this ... Corn oil, olive oil, and peanut oil are all fats that come
from plants. The fat on
a steak or piece of chicken is, of course, animal fat. If you think about these
plant and animal
fats, what is something similar about them? What is something different?
Now think about the characteristics of three other common substances: cheese,
soap, and bees
wax. Do you think these are made of some of the same things as the other fats?
Why or why
not?


Results and Conclusions:

The butter and oil you compared are both made from fat. The butter is made from
cow's milk
which makes it animal fat. The oil is made from corn, making it plant fat. Both
types of fat are
made from almost identical chemicals arranged in very similar ways. These
similarities cause
them to soak through a brown paper bag, feel greasy, and not dissolve in water.
There are also
some differences between them. The milk fat has a structure that allows it to be
shaken until it
becomes solid butter. Butter can be melted and resolidified over and over again.
The same
thing cannot be done with oil.