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Yes. As long as you cook it long enough for the internal temperature to reach at least 165 degrees F.
Seconds in hot water. The colder the water the longer. If you keep adding sugar to a glass of water and stir as you go, you will reach a point where the water will no longer melt the sugar.
Sugar usually would take too long to react to the heat and melt if it wasn't because of the ash. You see, ash is pure carbon, and as such, it catches on fire quite easily. That gives time to sugar to react to the heat f the flame and get on fire too.
Flame retardent clothing would, in normal terms, last as long as the materials used in the clothing and this would vary from material to material, such as wool, linen, cotton etc. The flame retardent elements of the clothing would only be able to withstand flame and fire destruction depending on the chemicals used The most widely used flame retardent product is a mineral compound known as ATH (aluminium hydroxide). Other common types of flame retardents are organohalogen compounds and organophosphorus compounds.
The temperature of a candle jar inhibits the growth of psychrotrophs, and the average temperature inside the candle jar is 30 degrees Fahrenheit.
it takes me 20 min to boil water and sugar to 300 degrees.
Not long, watch it carefully.
Yes, the 'a' in 'flame' is long.
It will take approximently 4.50967 minutes, that is, if you cook it in your bathtub.
not fast enough
All stoves and pans vary.. best to purchase a candy thermometer to tell you when your at 300 degrees
As long as you keep potassium chlorate from heat/flame sources, and away from combustible materials like sugar and paper, you could be safe with it.
Yes. As long as you cook it long enough for the internal temperature to reach at least 165 degrees F.
Seconds in hot water. The colder the water the longer. If you keep adding sugar to a glass of water and stir as you go, you will reach a point where the water will no longer melt the sugar.
The flame hasn't gone out since 776BC
forever
As long as you stay away from the equatorial regions where the temperature may occasionally reach 40 - 50 degrees Fahrenheit.