No, beet is not usually seen as a 'fat burning' food. For more information about fat burning foods and the thermic effect of foods, see the page link, further down this page, listed under Related Questions.
NO
no
Fennel is not considered to be a 'fat burning' food. To learn more about the best 'fat burning' foods, see the page link, further down his page, listed under Related Questions.
Foods high in fiber and foods with antioxives are considered by most to be belly fat burning foods. There is not a magic food that will eliminate belly fat however.
There are no "fat burning foods." Foods contain fat; they don't burn it. Exercise is what burns fat.
A list of fat burning foods can be found here: http://www.burnthefat.com/fat_burning_foods.html. The site recommends combining dark greens with lean proteins.
If you are referring to the thermic effect of food, egg would be considered a 'fat burning' food because it is a protein. For more information about the thermic effect of food, see the page link, further down this page, listed under both Related Questions and Sources and Related Links.
No - no food makes you burn fat. What helps you burn fat is exercise coupled with a calorie-controlled diet.
Beet
No, people of different races do not have different fat burning metabolisms. We are all human and metabolism food the same way on the inside -- calories in, calories out.
Burning fat does not directly cause gas. Gas in the digestive system is typically caused by the fermentation of undigested food by bacteria in the colon. However, changes in diet or exercise routines that lead to increased fat burning may indirectly affect digestion and potentially contribute to gas.
Burning fat does not directly cause farting. Farting is primarily caused by the digestion process in the intestines, not by burning fat.