Usually old (off) dairy products such as butter.
Having a rank smell or taste, from chemical change or decomposition; musty; as, rancid oil or butter.
Having a rank smell or taste, from chemical change or decomposition; musty; as, rancid oil or butter.
No. It may kill any bacteria, but the butter will still smell and taste rancid.
Rancid foods are those in which the fats or oils in the foods are degraded or undergoing the degradation process. The more fats or oils a food contains, the greater the risk of it becoming rancid over time or in the presence of external factors such as heat. The dangers of rancid food include not only the decreased quality of the food but potential health hazards that may result from ingesting a rancid food. Hopee It Helps!
Slightly rancid.
The food that you baked with it will taste fairly grim. Start again?
Perhaps your ingredients are not fresh. Flour does go rancid.
Fats such as butter and oils become rancid as they oxidize or "go bad" over time. Rancid oils or foods have a nasty, pugnant, acrid taste that lingers in your mouth.
The front taste buds taste salty and sweet foods. The sides of your tongue taste sour foods. The taste buds on the back of your tongue taste bitter foods.
Rancid oils taste bad, and contain free radicals, some of which are potentially carcinogenic. The potential for harm is low, however; eating rancid peanut butter probably won't result in a doctor or hospital visit.
You should not eat anything rancid because it may not taste very good.That sentence doesn't use rancid in a sentence very well... Rancid is an amazing descriptive word and deserves a sentence that uses it to the best of its amazingness.... something like..... As he walked by he could smell the rancid decomposition of the dog that had died a week earlier.More specifically, rancid refers to a bad odor from decomposing oils or fats. A sentence could be, "That spoiled milk has a rancid odor coming from it."
Rancid