Why don't you test it to find out or look it up? I tested it and I know the answer.
All you have to do is get two bolws of regular water.
To one add the food coloring.
Freeze both into icecubes.
Then leave them in a bowl on your counter or in the sun and see which one melts better.
actually you might need to look elsewhere
well when i observed i just did this as a science project i observed that the food coloring does affect the way water freezes i observed the food coloring freezes faster than the sink water. so the answer is yes it does affect the way water freezes.
Food coloring does not affect food, except to change its color. That's why it can be used in food.
No. Food coloring is simply added for visual effect.
You CANNOT use liquid food coloring---that will ruin the candy. You CAN use a paste or power food coloring purchased at a craft store like Michaels, Joannes etc or a cake/candy supply store. Also some gourmet cooking stores will have the right coloring. You can also buy candy melts from the same type of stores. They have red and pink candy melts. Also seen candy melts at Walmart in the craft/sewing section of the store.
well the food coloring affects the apple juice because the food COLORING only affects the color not the taste .
Unless the food coloring has some active ingredient, it will not affect the salt water chemically. In the environment, adding excessive food coloring to water may reduce the amount of light available to plants living in the water. Otherwise the coloring itself is innocuous.
No, just makes it blue.
No, food Coloring is a water based dye, it will have a negligible effect on the rate at which water evaporates.
no it doesn't
yes
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