oxygen
for the mostpart hydrophobic. peanut butter is very fatty (i.e. oily). These lipids are long chained carbon compounds, with little polarity (acid group)
It's a mixture of various compounds, not a compound. It contains Hydrogen, Oxygen, Carbon, and I think nitrogen but I'm not sure. Those are found in most foods.
I would guess Jelly. It has more sugar and therefore bacteria would have a ready supply to feed off of. I really don't know, though
Peanut butter is not an ingredient for the fabrication of trinitrotoluene !
Heterogeneous. You can see the different parts: bread, peanut butter.
The peanut butter is acting as a carrier rather than a growth medium. The peanut butter was contaminated, the bacteria survived, and the consumers got sick.
Salmonella...
Peanut butter has a natural chemical in it that bacteria can not grow in. The peanut butter can only be contaminated by an outside source. It also can separate, but just stir to fix that.
for the mostpart hydrophobic. peanut butter is very fatty (i.e. oily). These lipids are long chained carbon compounds, with little polarity (acid group)
in what ways might bacteria contribute to the success of a garden in which pea plants are growing.... answer: 1.the soil and peas provided the bacteria food...2. the garden probably gets watered and there's oxygen and the soil and peas for food... everything bacteria need to survive 3. if those weren't right then i have no clue what it is ** i hope I'm right **(:
Peanut butter is a homogeneous suspension of peanut particles in an oil. More of a sludge or paste than a solvent/solute system. There are some dissolved flavour compounds in the oil (oil=solvent) and probably some salts or sugar dissolved in the water present in the nut particles (water=solvent)Aside: The oil in peanut butter is often not peanut oil. Peanut oil is a valuable side product and is stripped away and replaced with cheaper vegetable oils
Peanut and butter--both of them are nouns. However, does peanut modify butter? There are nouns that are used as modifiers (door bell; bell of a door)Butter is churned cream--the fat of milk--or milk. Is peanut butter a churned milk or fat of milk with peanuts?The ingredient required to make peanut butter is just dry roasted peanuts. It does not require milk or milk fat. And so, peanut butter is not butter. Consequently, peanut does not modify (describe) butter in peanut butter. Thus, when combined, peanut and butter forms a new meaning; therefore, peanut butter is a compound word, an open compound word to be exact.
none its half of a table spoon... not that difficult
Because a peanut's called a peanut. =]
These are different units of measurement and cannot convert. You might as well be asking "What is a peanut in oranges?". I may like peanuts and I may like oranges, but they don't compare: you can't make peanut butter from oranges nor orange juice from peanuts.
Peanut butter is a homogeneous suspension of peanut particles in an oil. More of a sludge or paste than a solvent/solute system. There are some dissolved flavour compounds in the oil (oil=solvent) and probably some salts or sugar dissolved in the water present in the nut particles (water=solvent)Aside: The oil in peanut butter is often not peanut oil. Peanut oil is a valuable side product and is stripped away and replaced with cheaper vegetable oils
Your garbage disposal is already a breeding ground for microbes, so I would not worry about adding bacteria to it. But, I would be concerned about clogging the drain pipes with the peanut butter. Don't use the disposal. Just throw it in the trash.