Want this question answered?
Chemical Change :)
Because the chemical composition is modified.
physical
It depends on how long you roast it! If you simply allow it to warm up, it is still a marshmallow after roasting, so it is a physical change. If you like it crispy and burnt, it is a chemical change because it starts off white and then it eventually melts and turns brown. This browning is oxidation, a chemical process where some of the marshmallow's sugar is burnt and carbon dioxide is released into the air.
Physical cause it is still bread
The answer is physical because in physical they are 5 senses see, hear, touch,smell. The toasted marsh mallow you can taste it, smell it when you are far, touch it when you eat it, you can hear it when it comes out of the oven,and you can see it when it's on your plate.
That would be a chemical change.
chemicalBurning a marshmallow is a chemical change.
Toasting a marshmallow is actually a chemical change. The marshmallow becomes black and crispy, it also no longer tastes the same. Thus, it is a chemical change.Roasting a marshmallow is an example of a chemical change. Generally when you heat food in the process of cooking, you will cause a chemical change.
It is a chemical change.
Chemical Change :)
its an chemical change because roasting over a campfire the meat will be roasted so its chemical
There is a few signs of a chemical change that you see in a campfire. You can tell by the color, temperature and burning.
Yes it is a physical change
Physical change.
Yes, anything that burns (combust) is a chemical change
To correctly roast a marshmallow, take the marshmallow and leave it on the left side of the fire until that side is perfectly roasted (by letting it heat and change color twice), then quickly move your mouse to the middle under the campfire doing the same thing and finally move your mouse to the right of the campfire and completely roast the marshmallow. Put the marshmallow on the empty plate and start again!