- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#22714
Complete Question Explanation
Must Be True. The correct answer choice is (D)
The cooking teacher supplies us with information about a dish sure to please: the lima bean.
The proper cooking of the lima bean involves the size of the lima bean. Even though lima beans require generally an hour to properly cook, the time could be more or less depending on size. Overcooking is bad because it removes nutrients, undercooking is bad because the such beans cannot be fully digested.
One inference we might draw is that each lima bean has a particular window of ideal cooking times, and that since this window depends on the size of the bean, similarly sized beans would have similar ideal cooking times.
Answer choice (A): Since it is possible to cook the beans exactly right, this choice is unsupported, and incorrect. You should not assume that there is a continuum that makes properly done beans almost equivalent to overly cooked beans, because the stimulus gives us no clue as to the acceptable margins of error.
Answer choice (B): Since the stimulus did not attempt to establish whether overcooking and undercooking were nutritionally equal, this choice is unsupported, and incorrect.
Answer choice (C): The stimulus suggested that larger beans should be cooked longer, but made no comment about which bean, when properly cooked, is more digestible, so this choice is wrong.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice, and basically why the cooking teacher would have bothered to make the statements in the stimulus. Since different sized beans require different cooking times, if we want all of the beans we cook to be digestible and nutritious, we should use beans that are the same size as each other, so that all of them are properly cooked. You can assume that beans that are not fully digestible do not yield full nutritional value.
Answer choice (E): Since the stimulus never said which was better, this answer choice is unsupported and incorrect. If a bean is partially indigestible, it makes sense to believe that some nutritional value is lost, so we cannot make conclusions about whether it is better to cook some nutrients out, or leave the bean somewhat indigestible.
Must Be True. The correct answer choice is (D)
The cooking teacher supplies us with information about a dish sure to please: the lima bean.
The proper cooking of the lima bean involves the size of the lima bean. Even though lima beans require generally an hour to properly cook, the time could be more or less depending on size. Overcooking is bad because it removes nutrients, undercooking is bad because the such beans cannot be fully digested.
One inference we might draw is that each lima bean has a particular window of ideal cooking times, and that since this window depends on the size of the bean, similarly sized beans would have similar ideal cooking times.
Answer choice (A): Since it is possible to cook the beans exactly right, this choice is unsupported, and incorrect. You should not assume that there is a continuum that makes properly done beans almost equivalent to overly cooked beans, because the stimulus gives us no clue as to the acceptable margins of error.
Answer choice (B): Since the stimulus did not attempt to establish whether overcooking and undercooking were nutritionally equal, this choice is unsupported, and incorrect.
Answer choice (C): The stimulus suggested that larger beans should be cooked longer, but made no comment about which bean, when properly cooked, is more digestible, so this choice is wrong.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice, and basically why the cooking teacher would have bothered to make the statements in the stimulus. Since different sized beans require different cooking times, if we want all of the beans we cook to be digestible and nutritious, we should use beans that are the same size as each other, so that all of them are properly cooked. You can assume that beans that are not fully digestible do not yield full nutritional value.
Answer choice (E): Since the stimulus never said which was better, this answer choice is unsupported and incorrect. If a bean is partially indigestible, it makes sense to believe that some nutritional value is lost, so we cannot make conclusions about whether it is better to cook some nutrients out, or leave the bean somewhat indigestible.