pour liquid detergent into water with pepper.. maybe the surface tension interactions but that is some scientific stuff
coke
It is a solid
! tablespoon is 15gm liquid. So 1 tablespoon ground pepper is about 13 gm.
Dr. Pepper is the oldest major soft drink, created in 1885; Unlike Pepsi or Coca Cola, Dr. Pepper has never been a cola; After David Letterman described Dr. Pepper as 'liquid manure' on his show, CBS received phone calls from the Dr. Pepper company, CBS promised never to re-air the episode.
if you put it all in water the pepper will float and the sand will sink and the salt will dissolve, take the pepper off the top with a spoon or something then use filture paper and seperate the sand from liquid then boil liquid so you are left with salt
Add more liquid, if that doesn't work add more beans too. But too much white pepper has killed many a dish.
You can't remove the red pepper once you add it, but you can add more liquid or make a little more sauce and add it to the sauce that's too hot.
Sometimes it is clear and other times it can have an orange color, it all depends on the brand of Pepper Spray. Wildfire brand Pepper Sprays for instance shoots orange liquid (I think that may be due to the dye) and I know this from personal experience with the Wildfire spray.
Salt can dissolve while pepper cannot. So one way to separate salt and pepper would be to add water until all the salt dissolved and pouring the liquid out. Then, let the salt water solution evaporate, leaving salt behind! =D
No. no more than a flare gun. It "fires" liquid OC pepper spray, and not a projectile.
Yes, liquid compost can be applied pepper plants. Through applications to the soil, not the foliage, it serves as organic, slow-releasing sources of such necessary life-sustaining nutrients as boron, copper, iron, magnesium, molybdenum, nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, sulfur, and zinc.