It is a physical change.
(.)(.)
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No, it's a chemical change because chemical reactions are involved.
Cooking meat results in a chemical change. Proteins in the meat are long strings of biochemical material, and heat causes them to "unravel" and break down. This is chemical change.
its an chemical change because roasting over a campfire the meat will be roasted so its chemical
You have to press it with your finger, and if it bounces back, and it is soft, it doesn't need defrosting. However, if it is hard, and does not bounce back, then it needs defrosting.
Thawing meat is a chemical change because the meat isn't changing the meat is just melting but it's not changing shape or flavor or texture etcIt's a physical change the water is changing from solid - ice, to a liquid. The meat is not changing.
Physical changes can be undone. It is not possible to unfry a chicken. The heat casues chemical changes in the meat and in any coating.
physical
Physical change.
no it is a physical change because you are just changing the size not the chemical structure
Grinding meat is an example of a Physical Change, as opposed to a Chemical Change or Nuclear Change.
yes because that means that the meat inside of it is raw
that's a good question........it depends on if the hot dog is raw or cooked/frozen...............but if the meat is raw and there are bacteria in the hot dog and if you kill it by boiling it then it is a chemical change