water and urine
Detailed description of edible plant stemsAsparagusThe edible portion is the rapidly emerging stems that arise from the crowns in the early spring.BambooThe edible portion is the young shoot (culm).BirchTrunk sap is drunk as a tonic or rendered into birch syrup, vinegar, beer, soft drinks, and other foods.BroccoliThe edible portion is stem tissue, flower buds, and some small leaves.CauliflowerThe edible portion is proliferated stem and flower tissue.CeleryThe whole plant is edible including the crisp petiole (leaf stalk) and the fleshy taproot.CinnamonThe bark is used as a spice.FigThe edible portion is stem tissue. The fig "fruit" is actually an inverted flower with both the male and female flower parts enclosed inside stem tissue.GarlicThe edible portion is predominantly swollen leaves with a bit of stem.Ginger rootThe edible portion is a branched underground compressed stem also referred to as a rhizome.KohlrabiThe edible portion is an enlarged (swollen) stem. It is a member of the cabbage family and is white, green, or purple in color.LeekSimilar to other members in the onion family, the edible portion is swollen leaves with a bit of stem.Lotus rootThe edible portion is a stem modified for underwater growth. Buds and branches are visible on the vegetable sold as lotus root.kupalThe edible portion is stem segments.OnionThe edible portion is swollen leaves with a bit of stem. They are bulbs which, like garlic and leeks, are modified stems in which the primary storage tissue is expanded leaf bases. They come in white, yellow, and red varieties.PotatoThe edible portion is an underground stem that is also a tuber. The "eyes" of the potato are lateral buds. Potatoes come in white, yellow, orange, or purple-colored varieties.RadishThe whole plant is edible, but it is commonly grown for the root.RhubarbThe red or green stalks are the edible portion; the leaves are toxic.SassafrasThe shoots and stem bark are sometimes used to make root beer.ShallotAlso a member of the onion family, the edible portion is mainly swollen leaves with a bit of stem.Sugar caneThe edible portion is the inner stalk (stem) whose sap is a source of sugar. In its raw form chewing or extraction through a juicer extracts its juice.Sugar mapleXylem sap from the tree trunks is made into maple sugar and maple syrup.TaroThe edible portion is the underground stem (corm).White pineThe sweet inner bark (phloem) was eaten by native Americans.
It has a chemical reaction and the antacid starts to dissolve. or When you do the white vinegar with the antacid tablets together the tube/bottle explodes and causes a chemical reaction.
Wine is a mixture not a compound.
there is a reaction because laundry detergent is a base and vinegar is an acid so when you mix them together a chemical reaction will occur
This is a description of the reaction between the acetic acid, which is the "active ingredient" in vinegar, and baking soda, which is sodium bicarbonate. This double replacement reaction is covered in another question on WikiAnswers.
No. Apple cider vinegar is a result of fermentation of apples. White vinegar is produced by the process of distillation as in making liquor,liquours, or brews.
The muscle that holds the shells together.
yea because it melts into he vinegar and it is very difficult to reverse this chemical change
The major chemical component of vinegar is about 5% acetic acid. The systematic or proper chemical name of acetic acid is ethanoic acid. Vinegar is a weak acid produced by the oxidation of alcohol (ethanol) from wines and ciders by bacteria. It is commercially sold as white vinegar, brown vinegar, cider vinegar and balsamic vinegar. CH3COOH
white vinegar (acetic acid)
White vinegar
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.