Taste, color, consistency, and chemical composition.
No, salt and pepper cannot make gunpowder. Gunpowder is a mixture of saltpeter (potassium nitrate), charcoal, and sulfur. These ingredients have specific properties that allow for combustion when ignited, which is different from the properties of salt and pepper.
Pepper shakers will have more holes than salt (it's logical: it's worse to oversalt a dish).
Orange with pepper,salt preserves there for pepper would rot it out
100 g of salt has the exact same mass as 100 g of pepper. However, pepper is less dense than salt so equal volumes of salt and pepper would have the salt have a greater mass.
Salt and pepper complement each other. So I would suggest bread and butt.
Physical change as no new substance is formed and the properties have also not changed. Hope it helps!
Yes, salt and pepper would be considered a heterogeneous mixture because you can see the individual components (salt and pepper) without a uniform distribution.
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
For me, the best spice after salt and pepper, is GARLIC!
No. A mixture of salt and pepper is simply a mixture of salt and pepper. Silicon is an element unrelated to either salt or pepper.
The previous answer listed was salt. However, salt is not a spice; it is a mineral. Black pepper is one of the most commonly used spices, if not THE most.
The Esperanto words for salt and pepper are salo are pipro.