Sure you can. It won't hurt you if you do, but you may be sacrificing the taste of your dish. Some spices tend to lose some of their coloring and flavor after a period of time. Thus, an expiration date is added by the manufacturer.
1 teaspoon ginger powder to gram
Yes. Ginger and ginger powder is acceptable.
you can try at Walgreen's or cosco.. hope this helps! You can buy 100% organically grown ginger powder at www.wakayaperfection.com
theraflu powder does it still work after expiration date
If your recipe asks for Ginger root, it is the actual root you find in the produce section, that is is asking you to use. in some recipes it is for the flavor, but often ginger has a medicinal characteristic. If you have powder, that is the dried and ground form of the root, and it will not be the same measurement. It also depends on what you are making- if you can substitute the powder for the root.
If your recipe asks for Ginger root, it is the actual root you find in the produce section, that is is asking you to use. in some recipes it is for the flavor, but often ginger has a medicinal characteristic. If you have powder, that is the dried and ground form of the root, and it will not be the same measurement. It also depends on what you are making- if you can substitute the powder for the root.
Ginger root conversion is 1 TBS of sliced ginger root equals 1/8 teaspoon of powder ginger root. A TBS equals 3 teaspoons. So converting 1 tsp of sliced ginger root into powder equals 1/3 the amount of the 1 TBS conversion. Which is a very small number 0.0416666666. That's why the answer is so hard to find. I would go with less than a pinch of ginger powder, unless you really like ginger.
Dont think so, i always use Boric acid powder,
not at all
allam podi
kiti bloka
how much is 2 ml in a teaspoon