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no you cannot it just carmalized the sugar
cotton candy is just sugar. 100% sugar... wow...
Home cotton candy makers tend to be messy and ineffective compared to commercial machines. They just can't get the high speeds and pressures required to make a fine, flossy sugar thread. Buying cotton candy is relatively expensive, but it will provide the product qualities you expect in 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.
William created cotton candy because he wanted to bring joy to the children of Nashville with his all-sugar treat. Cotton candy was a sugar spun creation, and you could find it in many colors-from yellow, blue, or pink, to purple, white, or green. William also had help from john, but not really. john just gave him a cotton candy machine and helped spin the sugar. Cotton candy was originally called fairy floss.
Cotton candy is a form of spun sugar. The machine used to make cotton candy consists of a small bowl, into which sugar is poured. The sugar bowl is spun at high speed while heaters near the rim melt the sugar, which is squeezed out through tiny holes by centrifugal force.
cotton candy is just fluffed up sugar so all the things sugar does are the same such as: weight gain, cavities, tooth loss and if you eat too much: nauseae
Physical change - you are just spinning the sugar out into fine hairs. You can change the sugar back to the same form.
no its just candy and food coloring
The reason cotton candy dissolves in your mouth begins with the manufacturing process. First the sugar was melted and heated then dried into tiny strands whrn the cotton candy is put in your mouth the sugar is being rewarmed by your saliva which causes it to melt!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Hyperbole is the use of exaggeration as a figure of speech. It is used for emphasis, and is not intended to be taken literally. For example, "this bag weighs a ton!". How might we apply hyperbole to cotton candy? It depends what aspect of the cotton candy you wish to emphasise. Perhaps you are particularly impressed by it's lightness ("this cotton candy is lighter than a feather") or its sweetness ("the cotton candy was sweeter than an angel's kiss") or its flavour ("eating the cotton candy was like being gently punched in the teeth by chopped strawberries wrapped around a bag of tiny cut diamonds") or the quantity of the portion ("there was tons and tons of cotton candy!") or its price ("the cotton candy cost just a few cents a pop") or its location and context ("the cotton candy was perfect, just what I needed right then") or its general effect on you ("the cotton candy hit my lips like a pink explosion of strawberry-sugar floss-light stardrops and I nearly fainted with delight").
Many people will agree that ice cream is better than cotton candy. However, cotton candy is better at fairs.