Use the story "Feeding the Work Crew" to answer the question.

Feeding the Work Crew
Paul Bunyan and his crew worked all over the northern territories. Feeding the crew was hard. The men were very big, and they needed a lot of
food. One day, a visitor stopped by the camp. He saw workers unloading logs into a trap door. Steam rose from the door.
“That’s no place for logs,” said the visitor.
“Those aren’t logs,” grinned the cook. “They’re sausages for the boys’ breakfast!”
Another time, a new cook filled up the kettle with beans and added water. The beans bubbled up on the fire. They swelled up so big they lifted
off the roof of the kitchen. The workers had to eat their way into the kitchen to save the cook.
Paul’s blue ox, Babe, was seven axe handles wide between the eyes. Babe could eat fifty bales of hay, wire and all. When Babe ran away, he’d
be gone for days. His tracks were so deep that many people fell in and had to be rescued. Babe’s tracks formed the thousands of lakes that you
can see in Minnesota today.
Which detail from the story shows exaggeration?
(1 point)
“Paul Bunyan and his crew worked all over the northern territories.”
“They swelled up so big they lifted off the roof of the kitchen.”
“Feeding the crew was hard.”
“The beans bubbled up on the fire.

The detail from the story that shows exaggeration is: "They swelled up so big they lifted off the roof of the kitchen."

The detail from the story that shows exaggeration is "They swelled up so big they lifted off the roof of the kitchen."

To find the answer to the question, we need to identify a detail in the story that is exaggerated. In this case, the detail describes the beans swelling up to the point where they lift off the roof of the kitchen. This is an exaggerated and unlikely event, as beans would not typically have enough force to lift a roof. Therefore, this detail demonstrates exaggeration.