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salt helps to bring the water to the boil faster.
Well, there is no difference in terms of the act of "boiling," but there is a grammatical difference. Saying "bring it to the boil" is unnecessary. There is no need for using the definite article "the" for "boil". Merely say or write "bring to boil" or "boil." These are good enough.
Usually this is referring to water or a similar liquid. Bring to a boil basically means you heat it on the stove until it boils. You can tell that it's boiling once the water is bubbling. Once it is boiling you have "brought it to a boil"
That's going to depend on what temperature the water starts from.
Because heat changes the temperature of the water
The amount of heat needed to boil water varies with the air pressure. Water in a vacuum will boil at room temperature.
it will bring it to a steady boil
45 minutes to an hour. bring water to a boil then simmer on low to medium heat.
Just bring water to a boil, and you'll find some.
The word for bringing to a boil is "boil" or "bring to a simmer."
if you bring it to a full rolling boil it should be perfectly fine.
Because it is inflammable and if you bring it to a boil by direct heating there is a risk of it catching alight.