no you cannot it just carmalized the sugar
pixie stick pixie stix
Cotton candy is very simple to make. First sugar is melted into a liquid state and then spun it in the cotton candy machine. The machine forces the liquid through tiny holes that shape and cool the liquid sugar. After it cools, the sugar becomes a solid again. The center of the machine is filled with thousands of tiny threads that are collected and served on a stick.
It is called candy floss in the UK. Cotton candy in America.
A candy floss machine is more commonly known in America as cotton candy. Various types of sugar and edible dyes are combined, then spun at high speed to produce a floss or string like consistency and put on a stick or in a bag to be eaten.
To use the Fairy Floss machine set it up and plug it in. Place the sugar in the machine, turn the machine on and set it to medium. Let it heat up for approximately four minutes. Place your stick into the machine, keep twirling the stick and moving it in a counter clockwise direction until it is filled with cotton candy.
To make Cotton Candy Sugar you mix flavoring with "Sanding Sugar". sanding sugar is not the same consistency as your normal granulated sugar. There are a number of places where you can purchase different flavorings to mix in but i prefer using a product named great floss. it comes premixed in a one pound container. there are a number of different flavorings available.
there are 15g of sugar in a pixie stick.
It is unclear who was the first person to invent cotton candy. Four people - Thomas Patton, Josef Delarose Lascaux, John C. Wharton, and William Morrison - have all been named as the inventors of the candy. Wharton and Morrison received a patent for the cotton candy machine in 1899. They created the first electric cotton candy machine to melt and spin sugar through tiny holes using centrifugal force. After the two candy makers from Tennessee received the patent they took the invention to the St. Louis World's Fair in 1904. Patton received a separate patent in 1900 for his process of making cotton candy. He was experimenting with caramelizing sugar and forming threads using a fork. Patton used a gas-fired rotating plate to spin the cotton candy threads. He introduced the candy at Ringling Bros. Circus and it became popular with children. Around the same time, a Louisiana dentist, Lascaux, introduced cotton candy at his dental practice though he never received a patent or trademark for the confection. The early machines proved to be unreliable at times. Some simply broke and others would make loud rattling sounds. In 1949, Gold Medal Products introduced a more reliable model with a spring base. This helped to revolutionize cotton candy making. Today, cotton candy is a great treat to enjoy at a circus, amusement park or fair. Even though its beginning can be debated, it has become a favorite summertime candy. Cotton candy is very simple to make. First sugar is melted into a liquid state and then spun it in the cotton candy machine. The machine forces the liquid through tiny holes that shape and cool the liquid sugar. After it cools, the sugar becomes a solid again. The center of the machine is filled with thousands of tiny threads that are collected and served on a stick.
It is a machine for making fairy floss (in Australian English), which is also known as cotton candy (American E.) or candy floss (UK). The machine itself consists of a bowl in which sugar for the floss is put. The bowl spins at a high speed and its edges are heated, melting the sugar. As the melted sugar comes in contact with cool air, it turns solid again, in the form of cotton-like substance. If you twirl a stick near the edges of the bowl, it will gather the floss and voila, that's how fairy floss is made.
no one freakin know!
Yes. It provides calories that can be used soon after being consumed. A pure sugar candy such as a pixie stick might help you wake up in the morning. Some candies, such as snickers bars also have nuts which provide protein, preventing sugar crashes.
nah youre a pixie stick.