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I would have to say Pyrex
A Pyrex dish is made out of a special type of glass so that it can be used in the oven or microwave. It is made out of soda-lime glass to withstand high temperature.
Separate companies. Pyrex is licensed now by World kitchen which was the pyrex glass division that Corning spun off. World kitchen now makes the glass ware in PA out of soda-lime glass rather than the more durable borosilicate glass. In the EU pyrex is still made out of borosilicate glass. Anchor hocking is a separate 2nd largest glassware company.
Unfortunately, this depends upon whose Pyrex you are considering. The original Pyrex was a borosilicate glass, which has a low thermal expansion. The Trademark owners have allowed the name to be used nowadays by some manufacturers who use tempered soda-lime glass. But some licensees still use a borosilicate glass.
Pyrex is also known as borosilicate glass. It consists primarily of Silica and boron oxide. According to Wikipedia, typical borosilicate glass is composed of: 70% silica (silicone dioxide SiO2), 10% boron oxide, 8% sodium oxide, 8% potassium oxide, and 1% calcium oxide (lime). Wikipedia does note that some kitchenware glass marketed as Pyrex is actually soda lime glass. (see Wikipedia link)
Are you talking about Kitchen grade Pyrex (Tempered Soda Lime Glass) or Lab grade Pyrex (borosilicate glass)?Lab grade contains more metals such as boron, sodium, and aluminum making lab grade glassware better conductors of heat.Kitchen glassware do not conduct heat as well which prevents burning the bottom of whatever your baking.Both are less likely to break than other glass types.Exaxol Chemical Corporationhttp://www.exaxol.com
Borosilicate glass was used originally by Corning Glass for all Pyrex products because of its high resistance to thermal shock. The new tempered soda lime glass does not have the same resistance. It is normal window glass that has been tempered to give it heat resistance. Tempered glass, though tougher than normal glass, can still be scratched. This compromises the integrity of the temper and, if moisture gets in, the scratches can cause problems. Borosilicate glass can be scratched as well, but it does not break in the same manner as tempered glass: instead of shattering into many small fragments, it snaps in large pieces.
There is a taste difference between caffeine and no-caffeine versions of the same soda.
soda in a glass
Caffeine free soda hasn't caffeine !
absolutely
Yes you can.