Only if the smell is not bad. Sometimes a juice of this kind will ferment.
The tomatoes are fresh and still have juice, minerals and vitamins in them.
Yes, they do infest tomato plants. One of my tomatos was still green with a brown stop. The chiggers were sucking the sap out of this tomato. The chiggers were really small and I believe that hot sauce or a smelly spice juice will keep them away.
There may be variables that are unaccounted for or unknown
12 ounce (354 ml) of apple juice contain 10 tsp (39 g) of naturally occurring sugar from carbs, orange juice 8 tsp (33 g), tomato juice 12 tsp (49 g). 100 g of raw fruit (not juice): apple 10 g, orange 9 g, tomato 3g. Naturally occurring sugar is still sugar. So, Coca-Cola with 10 tsp (40g) is comparable to fruit juice. Of course, fruit juices may have other nutrients that soda does not. References: http://www.hookedonjuice.com http://www.nutritiondata.com/
the reason its still running is because your battery has transferred some juice into it already give life for a short period of time.
While pure (distilled) water is not a terribly good conductor, the acid in the Tomato Juice will partially ionize the water in it. The result is a "fairly" good conductor, but still nowhere near as good as copper, silver, aluminum, etc. So, yes, you easily get enough current to flow through tomato juice to give you a nasty shock or light a small bulb, but over any large distances, most of the electrical energy will be lost as heat due to resistance. While pure (distilled) water is not a terribly good conductor, the acid in the tomato juice will partially ionize the water in it. The result is a "fairly" good conductor, but still nowhere near as good as copper, silver, aluminum, etc. So, yes, you easily get enough current to flow through tomato juice to give you a nasty shock or light a small bulb, but over any large distances, most of the electrical energy will be lost as heat due to resistance.
No. Strained tomatoes still contain a lot of pulp, and probably aren't a good substitute. If that's all you have, try pureeing them in a blender; that might be close enough.
Apostrophe s. The tomato's skin is still green. The skin belongs to the tomato.
No. A tomato is a fruit. Unless you're talking tomato puree, then it's still a no.
Ketchup stains because it is a vegatable/fruit and the cirtus or juice interacts with the fiber in ther shirt. SO when you wipe of the ketchup it still leaves a stain because the fibers already soked up the juice.
While pure (distilled) water is not a terribly good conductor, the acid in the tomato juice will partially ionize the water in it. The result is a "fairly" good conductor, but still nowhere near as good as copper, silver, aluminum, etc. So, yes, you easily get enough current to flow through tomato juice to give you a nasty shock or light a small bulb, but over any large distances, most of the electrical energy will be lost as heat due to resistance. While pure (distilled) water is not a terribly good conductor, the acid in the tomato juice will partially ionize the water in it. The result is a "fairly" good conductor, but still nowhere near as good as copper, silver, aluminum, etc. So, yes, you easily get enough current to flow through tomato juice to give you a nasty shock or light a small bulb, but over any large distances, most of the electrical energy will be lost as heat due to resistance.
If it's still unknown, how would anybody know it?