CAT 2024 Slot 2 — VARC Question 24
The passage below is accompanied by four questions. Based on the passage, choose the best answer for each question.
[S]pices were a global commodity centuries before European voyages. There was a complex chain of relations, yet consumers had little knowledge of producers and vice versa. Desire for spices helped fuel European colonial empires to create political, military and commercial networks under a single power.
Historians know a fair amount about the supply of spices in Europe during the medieval period – the origins, methods of transportation, the prices – but less about demand. Why go to such extraordinary efforts to procure expensive products from exotic lands? Still, demand was great enough to inspire the voyages of Christopher Columbus and Vasco Da Gama, launching the first fateful wave of European colonialism. . . .
So, why were spices so highly prized in Europe in the centuries from about 1000 to 1500? One widely disseminated explanation for medieval demand for spices was that they covered the taste of spoiled meat. . . . Medieval purchasers consumed meat much fresher than what the average city-dweller in the developed world of today has at hand. However, refrigeration was not available, and some hot spices have been shown to serve as an anti-bacterial agent. Salting, smoking or drying meat were other means of preservation. Most spices used in cooking began as medical ingredients, and throughout the Middle Ages spices were used as both medicines and condiments. Above all, medieval recipes involve the combination of medical and culinary lore in order to balance food's humeral properties and prevent disease. Most spices were hot and dry and so appropriate in sauces to counteract the moist and wet properties supposedly possessed by most meat and fish. . . .
Where spices came from was known in a vague sense centuries before the voyages of Columbus. Just how vague may be judged by looking at medieval world maps . . . To the medieval European imagination, the East was exotic and alluring. Medieval maps often placed India close to the so-called Earthly Paradise, the Garden of Eden described in the Bible.
Geographical knowledge has a lot to do with the perceptions of spices’ relative scarcity and the reasons for their high prices. An example of the varying notions of scarcity is the conflicting information about how pepper is harvested. As far back as the 7th century Europeans thought that pepper in India grew on trees "guarded" by serpents that would bite and poison anyone who attempted to gather the fruit. The only way to harvest pepper was to burn the trees, which would drive the snakes underground. Of course, this bit of lore would explain the shriveled black peppercorns, but not white, pink or other colors.
Spices never had the enduring allure or power of gold and silver or the commercial potential of new products such as tobacco, indigo or sugar. But the taste for spices did continue for a while beyond the Middle Ages. As late as the 17th century, the English and the Dutch were struggling for control of the Spice Islands: Dutch New Amsterdam, or New York, was exchanged by the British for one of the Moluccan Islands where nutmeg was grown.
Five jumbled up sentences (labelled 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5), related to a topic, are given below. Four of them can be put together to form a coherent paragraph. Identify the odd sentence and key in the number of that sentence as your answer.
1. The UK is a world leader in developing cultivated meat and the approval of a cultivated pet food is an important milestone.
2. If we’re to realise the full potential benefits of cultivated meat the government must invest in research and infrastructure.
3. The first UK applications for cultivated meat produced for humans remain under assessment with the Food Standards Agency.
4. The previous UK government had been looking at fast-tracking the approval of cultivated meat for human consumption.
5. It underscores the potential for new innovation to help reduce the negative impacts of intensive animal agriculture.
Answer & solution
Answer: 4
Easy
Four sentences cohere; key in the odd one. The theme centres on the UK's approval of a cultivated PET food as a milestone for cultivated meat, its significance, and the call for investment - with one sentence about cultivated meat for HUMAN consumption standing apart.
Build the coherent set. Sentence 1 announces the UK leading in cultivated meat and the approval of a cultivated PET food as "an important milestone." Sentence 5 - "It underscores the potential ... to reduce the negative impacts of intensive animal agriculture" - the pronoun "It" refers to that milestone (1). Sentence 2 - "If we're to realise the full potential ... the government must invest" - extends from the milestone's potential. So 1-5-2 cohere around the pet-food approval and its promise.
Resolve 3 vs 4. Sentences 3 and 4 both concern cultivated meat for HUMAN consumption (FSA assessment; previous government fast-tracking) - a different track from the pet-food milestone. The coherent paragraph about the pet-food approval needs only one such linking sentence, and sentence 3 ("first UK applications for human consumption remain under assessment") naturally contrasts with the just-approved pet food, fitting the milestone narrative. Sentence 4 (a past government "looking at fast-tracking ... for human consumption") is a stray historical aside that neither the milestone nor the investment line builds on - it is the odd one out.
Answer: 4. Sentences 1-5-2 (with 3) cohere around the pet-food milestone and its promise; sentence 4 is the disconnected aside about a previous government fast-tracking human-consumption approval.