If you are asking about grape must (crushed grapes and juice, usually referring to winemaking), then they are not the same. The grape solids eventually get removed, thereby reducing the total amount. Also, most Grape Juice has some type of preservative (sodium benzoate is common) which will kill the yeast cultures used to make wine. However, if grape must isn't what you are talking about, I have no idea :-)
If you are asking about grape must (crushed grapes and juice, usually referring to winemaking), then they are not the same. The grape solids eventually get removed, thereby reducing the total amount. Also, most grape juice has some type of preservative (sodium benzoate is common) which will kill the yeast cultures used to make wine. However, if grape must isn't what you are talking about, I have no idea :-)
It is a chemical change because it can not be reversed
Fermentation is basically when yeast grows on the SKIN of grapes. When the skin is broken down, the yeast feeds on the glucose ( which is in the grape juice ) which turns it into ethanol ( alcohol ) BUT and the SAME time it makes carbon dioxide. This is used in wine making, so it doesn't do anything to the grape juice, but it helps make it after the ethanol is taken out and the rest is purified.
On vines ... the same as any other grape !
they are the same beacause there both mixtures
I believe that Sprite is actually a hypotonic solution. At first, I believed that it was hypertonic until I conducted an experiment in my Biology class in which grapes were exposed to Sprite and White Grape Juice. The grapes in the White Grape Juice showed to be somewhat isotonic and each grape in Sprite had a visible increase in mass. This was weighed with the same scale and materials were the same. I did three trials and all trials displayed a hypotonic result from Sprite, thus my hypothesis which was that the grapes in Sprite would shrivel up and decrease in mass because Sprite is a hypertonic solution, was not supported by my data. Although the trials were few in number, the end result for each one appeared the same. Therefore, I can conclude that Sprite is in fact a hypotonic solution instead of a hypertonic solution as I had first thought.
Yes, they are both packed with antioxidants (polyphenols). The only difference is that grape juice contains a lot more sugar, and wine contains alcohol.
I believe that Sprite is actually a hypotonic solution. At first, I believed that it was hypertonic until I conducted an experiment in my Biology class in which grapes were exposed to Sprite and White Grape Juice. The grapes in the White Grape Juice showed to be somewhat isotonic and each grape in Sprite had a visible increase in mass. This was weighed with the same scale and materials were the same. I did three trials and all trials displayed a hypotonic result from Sprite, thus my hypothesis which was that the grapes in Sprite would shrivel up and decrease in mass because Sprite is a hypertonic solution, was not supported by my data. Although the trials were few in number, the end result for each one appeared the same. Therefore, I can conclude that Sprite is in fact a hypotonic solution instead of a hypertonic solution as I had first thought.
Same basic concept. Crush grapes add yeast let mother nature do the rest. Today we filter the wine and do not have the contamination problems that they had 2000 years ago but wine is still just fermented grape juice. Same as what Jesus served.
Fruitjuice and yeast ... however most people would pin point grapes as the fruit same thing though ... make sure to ave a juice containing an ekvivalent of 5-6 kilo suger per 20-25 liter water add yeast ... let it ferment in a closed bottle with air outlet until it stops .. let it clear there are all kind of chemicals you can add .. sulfor to make it more resistent for wild fermentation... kiselgur to clear the wine etc... bottle and drink or distill it f it taste badly
The phrase, seeing the glass as half empty, means that a person is taking a pessimistic view, preferring to see what he or she doesn't have rather than what he or she has. If you have, let us say, a 10 ounce glass which contains 5 ounces of grape juice, you can be happy that you have half a glass of grape juice to drink, or you can be unhappy that you do not have the full 10 ounces of grape juice to drink. You can see the glass as half full, which is a good thing, or you can see the glass as half empty, which is a bad thing, although in either case it is the same glass with the same 5 ounces of grape juice in it.
I think the milk will take longer as it has some fats in it.