yeah, it tastes same!
Actually, white vinegar is a type of vinegar. There are many types of vinegars, although as a general rule vinegar is a solution that contains acetic acid and water (may contain other acids as well).
No, it is quite different. The acid in vinegar is diluted acetic acid (CH3COOH) while stomach acid is fairly concentrated hydrochloric acid (HCl).
White vinegar dissolves rust from metals. Objects can be soaked in white vinegar or the vinegar can be poured over the object and then scrubbed off using steel wool.
No. Vinegar has a pH of about 2.4, making it an acid.
calcuime
soak the finger or body part with the thorn in vinegar. It can be either white vinegar or cider vinegar, they both work the same. Or place cotton saturated with vinegar where the thorn is , and leave it in there for 20-30minutes. The thorn will just fall out.
Wine is a mixture not a compound.
no
yeah... technically but the only thing is that the white wine vinegar gives a sharper taste.
Undiluted vinegar is a type of vinegar that has not been diluted or flavored with other ingredients. Distilled vinegar and undiluted vinegar are typically the same product.
No, White vinegar is plain Acetic acid in water, but either as a simple chemical mix (usually very cheap or cleaning grade vinegar) or through fermentation of distilled alcohol (akin to Vodka). White wine vinegar is made from the fermentation of real White wine. As such White vinegar has a simple acidic taste, whilst White Wine vinegar retains much of its original White wine taste, with its alcohol replaced by the Acetic acid of vinegar.
NO Cider vinegar has a different flavor and is much darker in color.
I'm. Not sure
No. Not even close
I. Don't
None, it is the same. Answer.com answered the question, "What is the difference between Cider vinegar and apple cider vinegar" - and said. "None, it is the same." My question is - who is the authority on this? I keep googling the question and all the google answers do not say that the two are the same. As a matter of fact, they only refer to one of them and call it apple cider vinegar.
Unfortunately, all vinegar has an odor. There are currently no varieties of vinegar that are available for purchase that are free of odors. Odorless vinegar is probably in test development though.
They will act the same in the form of baking, but will produce very different results (taste, color, ect.).
White vinegar