Dan here is some stuff I did with Zeno. Target grade 9 and based on some of the stuff we talked about.
🧪 Daily Fiber Science Lab: Lettuce Core + Chemistry Edition (With Pronunciations)
Experiment #2: Lettuce Core Meets Chemistry
Hypothesis: The tough white core of lettuce is edible, high in fiber, and participates in gut chemistry in interesting ways.
Materials:
1 head of lettuce (Iceberg or Romaine)
Knife
Bowl
Teeth and jaw muscles (for force measurements)
Stomach and intestines (primary reactor vessels)
Microscope of imagination
Step 1: Structural Chemistry of the Core
The lettuce core is mostly cellulose, a polymer made from glucose units:
[
\{Cellulose} = (\text{C}6\{H}{10}\{O}_5)_n \ (\C6-H10-O5, “cellulose polymer”})
]
(n) = number of glucose monomers stacked in chains
Humans cannot break β-1,4-glycosidic bonds in cellulose → passes largely intact
Insoluble fiber = “structural Lego bricks” for plant cells
Lignin also present (complex phenolic polymer) → adds rigidity, indigestible
Observation: The core’s rigidity feels like chewing on a tiny piece of plant steel.
Step 2: Fiber Types and Biological Reactions
Fiber types in our diet interact with biology differently:
Insoluble fiber
Function: Adds bulk, sweeps intestines
Chemistry: Mostly cellulose + lignin (C-H-O polymers)
Reaction in gut: Not digested, no chemical breakdown
Soluble fiber
Function: Gel formation, feeds gut bacteria
Example: pectin
[
\text{Pectin} = (\text{C}6\text{H}{10}\text{O}_7)_n \ (\text{C6-H10-O7, “pectin polymer”})
]
Bacteria ferment it → produce short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs):
[
\text{C}6\text{H}{10}\text{O}_5 \xrightarrow{\text{gut bacteria}} 2 \text{C}_2\text{H}_4\text{O}_2 (\text{C2-H4-O2, acetate}) + \text{energy}
]
Resistant starch
Example: cooled potato starch
Starch (amylose) =
[
(\text{C}6\text{H}{10}\text{O}_5)_n \ (\text{C6-H10-O5, “starch polymer”})
]
Not broken down in small intestine → large intestine fermentation → more SCFAs
Step 3: Simple Chemistry Analogy
Think of your gut like a mini electrolysis lab.
If you split water using electrolysis:
[
2 \text{H}_2\text{O} \ (\text{H2-O, dihydrogen oxide}) \xrightarrow{\text{electricity}} 2 \text{H}_2 \ (\text{H2, dihydrogen}) + \text{O}_2 \ (\text{O2, dioxygen})
]
Similarly, your gut bacteria “split” fibers:
Glucose units in soluble fiber → hydrogen, acetate, butyrate (tiny molecules)
Hydrogen here isn’t explosive (mostly used in metabolism by other microbes)
Energy and SCFAs fuel colon cells → gut efficiency upgraded
So fiber = substrate for tiny chemical reactors in your intestines. Lettuce core is part of this network, albeit a minor one.
Step 4: Comparative Fiber Chemistry
| Food Item | Fiber Type | Approx. per 100g | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lettuce core | Insoluble | 1–2g | Structural, low nutrient |
| Potato (with skin) | Insoluble + RS | 2–3g | Resistant starch, slow fermentation |
| Carrots | Soluble + Insoluble | 2–3g | Partial SCFA production |
| Oats | Soluble | 3–4g | Fermented to acetate, propionate |
| Beans / Lentils | Mixed | 8–15g | Fiber + resistant starch → gut party |
| Steak / Chicken | None | 0g | Control, no SCFAs |
Step 5: Lab Observations
Lettuce core: edible, mostly structural fiber → minor contribution to gut SCFA reactions
Potato skins / beans: dense fiber, feeds gut chemistry efficiently
Soluble fiber: gel-forming, slows digestion, helps regulate blood sugar
Insoluble fiber: mechanical, sweeps intestines like a tiny broom
Resistant starch: hides in “plain foods,” feeds microbiome silently
Step 6: Real-Life Applications
Mix fiber types for maximal gut efficiency: potato skins + beans + oats + veggies
Lettuce core? Optional lab curiosity
Protein-only diet (steak, chicken, eggs) = no fiber, no SCFAs, no happy microbiome
Consider fermentation as in-lab biology: intestines are conducting chemistry every meal
Step 7: Lab Humor Notes
Lettuce core: not useless, but not a fiber powerhouse
Gut = chemical reactor: every fiber type = different substrate
SCFAs = “energy coins” your gut cells spend
Fiber = DIY lab kit inside you — assemble wisely!
💡 Key Takeaways / Fiber Chemistry Summary
Cellulose and lignin = plant skeleton, insoluble fiber
Pectin + hemicellulose = soluble fiber → fermented to SCFAs
Resistant starch = delayed fermentation, gut-friendly
Meat = 0 fiber → negative control
Mix fiber types → balanced gut chemistry → happy microbiome