Bake at 350 for 20 minutes
it has fast legs so it can catch its prey faster
Corn bread rises higher in the middle because of the way you put in the ingredients the ingredients somehow comes up in a way also the corn part is mostly in the middle so. :)
On a car, it is in a housing. On 1 end there is a spring with a bulb, and the other end is the round closing plate. With the spring and temp bulb in the engine side, as the temp. rises the temp. bulb with the spring will pull the round plate open so that coolant may circulate.
no just keep the oven temp at the required temperature for the cake(s) you are baking
We don't know exactly how much cornbread the colonists eat, but we do know they ate quite a bit. They usually had a surplus of the ingredients needed for cornbread, so they made lots of it. Colonists usually had a lot of cornmeal, flour, and salt to make the cornbread.
People in the south grew corn as a major crop so they used the corn to make cornbread and other dishes with corn.
There won't be a difference in cooking temperature, just time. Bake at the temp reccommended in the recipe. If your mini pans are about cupcake size, they'll take 15 - 20 minutes or so, at 350 F.
as the temperature of an object rises so does the.
Yes, absolutely, but lower the oven temp you use by about 15 degrees and bake it a little longer, keep an eye on it - because its a larger piece you are baking, it will take longer for the heat to penetrate the roll, and so you want the temperature lower so that you don't burn the outside before the inside is also done.
Not usually. Cornbread is bread. Cornbread can be mixed with just about anything you want, even sweets; so you could make a sort of "poor man's dessert" with it, but I grew up eating it every week and it was just bread, really good bread. In other words, it depends.
When the Earth surface is heated by the sun, the AIR above the surface is also warm. The warm air rises, and when it rises it cools down. Then it condenses and form clouds. And then it rains. (If the air rises very quickly cumulonimbus clouds can form) So the simple answer, Convectional Rainfall: Water forces to rise by heat.
Hot air rises and cools as it does so.