No, but the location in the refrigerator can.
you eat it
No. because flavored jello sets differently sorry
jello sets at any cool temp but i use 37 degrees
Make some jello before it sets, pour some into a glass and put a straw into the glass. After the jello sets, give it to someone saying "here's some fruit punch" or something and they won't be able to drink it through the straw because it's jello!!! LOL Make sure that you say "April fools!"
its your mom stop coming to answers for your homework
Jello is a flavored gelatin dessert. There are also recipes that use Jello to make molded gelatin salads (but these have mostly fallen out of use since the 1960s, except for molded gelatin fruit salads). Gelatin is the main ingredient in Jello, and the reason it sets up.
In my experience, jello jigglers only last a couple of days in the fridge. Any longer and they become "watery." If uncovered, they will dry out around the edges. Either way, once they have set it is best if they are eaten fairly quickly.
sets people on fire.
The flavor or tone of a piece of writing refers to the overall attitude that is conveyed through the author's choice of language, style, and perspective. It can be formal, informal, humorous, serious, informative, persuasive, etc., and sets the mood and expectations for the reader.
it sets fire to it and everything explodes
Due to the bromelain enzyme in fresh pineapple, the jello will not set. Jello has the protein gelatin in it, and the bromelain prevents the gelatin molecules to bond with other gelatin molecules. If you make two molds of jello, one with pineapple, one without, you will find that only the one without pineapple will set. If you use canned pineapple, the jello will set because canned products are heated to eliminate microbes, but it also destroys or greatly reduces the amount of enzymes present.
When the sun sets, the trees cast long shadows. "Sun" is singular and requires a singular verb: "sets". "Trees" is plural and requires a plural verb: "cast".