So in a few hours, i will be eating lunch and i've already thought on what to buy. There is this chinese take away shop that has an offer of rice plus any 2 choices of meat. Basically, they give you a plate (small or large, depending on your choice) that you pay for and then you just add rice and 2 types of meat of your choice.
The thing is, there is no limit as to how much you put on your plate, so long as its the plate that you bought and not something you brought along. And since TL is full of uni students studying something with strong level of math, i'd like to ask how i can maximise the amount of food that i can put on my plate without the food falling out of my plate.
Normally, i just buy the large plate, put a decent amount and it makes me full. But im short on change so i have to settle with the small one.
Just put the big stuff first on the plate and fill the holes with smaller food. At the end you should have build a pyramide looking like that: ...... _ ...----------- -B-B-B-B-B BBB-BB-B-B
Smash each pellet of rice into a sphere, stack hexagonally http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sphere_packing .... This is the only result I know about packing mathematically. If you just want good advice, press the rice down on your plate so it sticks better and you can fit more; then push the meat into the rice. Then rice on top and pack down, each layer decreasing in radius till it resembles a sphere.
yeah i mean the way that i thought you could do also is create a sort of half sphere on the sides with the meat around the edges and put the rice in the middle
like this ....... M ..... MRRM ....MRRRRM . MRRRRRM
By utilizing the integral of meat, and adding the integral of rice, and utilizing the coefficients of friction of rice and meat you should be able to calculate an optimal allotment such that the hexagonal structure is stable under pressure.
If the rice is sticky, use it as a wall. Let's say this is your plate seen from top First layer ...RRRRR RMMMMMR RMMMMMR RMMMMMR ...RRRRRR
Second layer ...RRRRR RRMMMRR RMMMMMR RRMMMRR ...RRRRRR
Third layer ...RRRRR RRRMRRR RRMMMRR RRRMRRR ...RRRRRR
From there, once you have strong foundations you can pile the meat almost vertically. If the rice sticks well you pack the whole stuff properly should be able to get a nice tower.
Pro-tip : don't put too much sauce if there is, it contributes to unstick the rice. Instead, ask for a little cup and put the sauce in there.
This is what I usually do at a mongolian barbeque place that lets you put as much food as you can in a bowl. First, surround the other edge of the plage with something like brocolli with the flower part sticking out. The flowery edge will contain food inside and keep food from spilling out. Then start to pile the bottom with stuff that can be compressed, like some vegetables or what not in a circle. put a ton of meat and flat stuff in the middle and pile that alll on top, but make sure the brocolli is keeping the food inside. then keep building higher and higher. The most important thing is to have no shame. Use your hands if you have to to make sure the food pile is stable and if there are people waiting for you behind you, ignore them and keep piling your dish.
Not a real math problem, because you don't have rigid bodies.
It could be a material science problem, but you have to provide coefficients for how adhesive the substances are so you can predict when it would tend to fall over.
I think the best technique is simply just to compress the food as much as possible. At teppanyaki places quite often the meat is curled so that the meat takes up more space.
thanks alot for the tips guys. I went along with endy's idea. It worked, as in 100% worked. Normally you see alittle difference between the theoretical and practical results of math. But this worked exactly as planned. And people around me in the food court were looking at me or looking at the food tower (around 15~20cm height) with open eyes and mouth abit opened.
I guess they were thinking how food could be piled up so high, or how im such a genius.
On December 30 2011 21:27 sharky246 wrote: thanks alot for the tips guys. I went along with endy's idea. It worked, as in 100% worked. Normally you see alittle difference between the theoretical and practical results of math. But this worked exactly as planned. And people around me in the food court were looking at me or looking at the food tower (around 15~20cm height) with open eyes and mouth abit opened.
I guess they were thinking how food could be piled up so high, or how im such a genius.