Food Chemist vs. Chemical Engineer- Help

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the appropriate type of professional to consult for developing a new edible product. Participants explore the roles of food chemists and chemical engineers in the context of product formulation and ingredient handling.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant seeks guidance on whether to consult a food chemist or a chemical engineer for assistance in creating an edible product.
  • Another participant suggests that a non-disclosure agreement with patent attorneys may be necessary, indicating concerns about confidentiality.
  • Some participants argue that chemical engineers are likely better suited for handling materials and processing, while food chemists may specialize in various aspects such as nutrition, preservation, and agricultural chemistry.
  • There is a humorous acknowledgment of the diverse specializations within food chemistry, with a pun about "flavors" noted by one participant.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the roles of food chemists versus chemical engineers, with no consensus reached on which professional is definitively more appropriate for the task at hand.

Contextual Notes

Participants highlight the importance of confidentiality and the need for legal agreements when discussing proprietary product ideas, but do not resolve the specific qualifications needed for the project.

Food Chemist vs. Chemical Engineer for Invention of edible product. Reasoning in comments, please.

  • Food Chemist

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Chemical Engineer

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    0
  • Poll closed .
sunshine1025
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First, thank you for taking the time to read this. I need some guidance as I am inventing somewhat of a new edible product. Curious as to if someone can point me in the right direction for the type of chemist I should actually be looking for. At first I was under the impression that it would be a food chemist, but from further research, am thinking it may be more of an engineer to help make this product by combining certain ingredients while it still being edible to consume... I can't give too much info away on exactly what the product is although I know it'd make it easier to find the help but I'm pretty sure you get the idea of the direction I'm going with this.
Thanks in advance for the suggestions!
 
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sunshine1025 said:
but I'm pretty sure you get the idea of the direction I'm going with this.
Actually, no. You're describing a "mind reading" experiment. What you want is a non-disclosure agreement with patent attorneys and consultants/consulting firms.
 
Of course a non- disclosure agreement/ patent when working with someone or telling someone about it (which is why I didn't go into it on here) ... but what I'm asking In this thread is guidance on what type of chemist I should be looking to contact to continue the process. Food Chemist vs. Chemical Engineer to help put the ingredients together to make the edible product. If I'm way off here between these two types of professions, what would you suggest?
 
Bystander said:
Actually, no. You're describing a "mind reading" experiment. What you want is a non-disclosure agreement with patent attorneys and consultants/consulting firms.
And thank you for your reply.
 
Chemical engineers are probably better trained for the materials handling aspects. Food chemists? Pardon the pun, but they probably come in many flavors, those who are more focused on nutrition and diet, those who deal with preservation and storage issues, those who work on chemical issues in primary production (agricultural chemistry), and, I would suppose, chem. E's who've moved into food processing.
 
Bystander said:
Chemical engineers are probably better trained for the materials handling aspects. Food chemists? Pardon the pun, but they probably come in many flavors, those who are more focused on nutrition and diet, those who deal with preservation and storage issues, those who work on chemical issues in primary production (agricultural chemistry), and, I would suppose, chem. E's who've moved into food processing.
I see what you're saying. When you break it down that way, it does sound like a chemical engineer would be more beneficial to me at this point. Your answer helped... and got quite a chuckle at the flavors comment. Very clever haha
 

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