Yes! Oh Course; It Would Be The Only Reasoning of You Seeing The Meat Dissolve Or Bring Worms or Maggots! You Wouldn't Have Good Or Even Same Results With The Meat Cooked.!
Cooked.
No. Carbonated drinks don't cause an effect of being drunk. The percentage of alcohol in the drink is what makes you drunk.
There is little difference. The contents of the stomach before the drink have a far greater effect. The reason for this belief is that people tend to drink carbonated drinks more rapidly than non-carbonated.
the acid in carbonated drinks is so dilute (weak) it has hardly any effect on the body.
it makes you really week and all the mass comes out of your bones hope this helps :)
It helps with the flavor and keeping it fresh.
You may associate carbonation with dehydration, but more likely - the beverage is caffeinated, and the caffein is a diuretic, so may dehydrate you. I am thus not answering about carbonation per se, but about its common companion, Caffeine, and its effect. I welcome more comments.
yes it does have an effect.
yes
There are a number of things that can make cans of soft drinks 'spoil' and not taste good or even be bad for you. Exposure to high heat. Evaporation through the seals Poor sanitation prior to canning/bottling For bottles, expose to light can have an effect.
negetive
A carbonated beverage is a type of sparkling beverage, but a sparkling beverage is not necessarily carbonated. Carbonation is the result of adding compressed carbon dioxide to a drink to achieve this effect. Many alcoholic beverages such as beer and sparkling wine produce carbon dioxide bubbles as part of the natural fermentation process. Even though the bubbles in alcohol are CO2, it is not technically "carbonated" because the CO2 was not added artificially as it is with soda drinks.
Generally speaking, carbonated water is just as hydrating as non-carbonated water. Most carbonated water contains no additives (other than the carbon dioxide). However, some carbonated water contains additives. One of the more common additives to carbonated water is sodium chloride (table salt). Depending upon the amount of sodium in the carbonated water, and your body's sodium levels, the carbonated water could be more or less hydrating than the non-carbonated variety. The addition of the carbon dioxide has no effect on the hydrating power of the water.