Check out this website: http://www.wise4living.com/khcookware/glass.htm I tried to copy and paste it here, but it's copywrited. Just check out the short paragraph beside the picture of the glass bakeware near the top of the page. Hope this helps. Patricia D.
no!
Yes. They can. The clues of a chemical reaction are production of a gas, change in temperature, color change, production of a precipitate. If you take either baking soda or baking powder, and you add them to vinegar they both form bubbles in a chemical reaction.
It would change a little bit because you will lose moisture in the baking.
Because when baking soda is added to water the chemicals react as a freezing component causing the temperature to decrease by 1-5 degrees
it changes it because when you add baking soda to water it starts to bubble/boil up which mean when something bubble that mean that the temperature is rising because water boils at 100 degrees so therefor baking soda has some type of chemical that makes it bubble up
Baking is a chemical change.
metal inox
Baking cookies is a chemical change.
Baking cookies is a chemical change.
The oven temperature can be adjusted by changing the temperature of the oven. Over a few minutes, the nonstick pan can eventually change to the temperature of the oven.
pretty sure its a chemical change.
Luddites are opposed to technological change.