Actually the color of coffee with no additives added can vary greatly. The color of coffee is determined by what coffee berries are used and the duration of the roasting process.
"Black" coffee is coffee without milk and sugar.
Yes coffee is black
Yes. Black coffee is a homogeneous mixture.
Very good question. I'm in the process of researching that myself. I looked on a Lipton tea box and it list carbs as zero. If you drink the tea stright as in I do, one would assume it would have zero
Black coffee is a homogeneous mixture.
coffee, tonic water, honey, and orange juice.
Black Coffee Blues was created in 1997.
Yes. Black coffee is a homogeneous mixture.
Black coffee is acidic with a pH of 5
Black coffee is not a solution, but is actually a mixture. Small particles of the coffee (and sometimes actual grounds) make it through the coffee filter and give it a uniform, black color.
Coffee is a homogeneous mixture (assuming it has been well-stirred), as the mixture has a uniform composition throughout. Dividing the mixture into macroscopic parts, each part will have the same composition as the original mixture.
It is not always black!