it depends on the food that you're going to make because it could affect the food if you use the wrong ingredient or substitute.
No you Cant use Baking powder instead of bicarbonate of soda because if you put bicarbonate of soda into a cake mixture then you will get a very unpleasant taste !
33.http://convert-to.com/753/baking-powder-conversion-plus-nutritional-facts.html
no, these are two entirely different ingredients. Bakin powder is used to make batter rise, for instance in cakes as where baking soda is used to neutralize ingredients like salt and vinigar in certain recipes and also to enhance flavour.
You Could but i Dont Recommend You To do it Becasue i Dont think Your Hair and Scalp would be very Healthy, Baking Powder Scatterd ontop It As i Say, I Dont see why You Cant, But i Dont No if it Would affect Dandruf So Give it a TRY !!!!!! yes, but it can bleach ur hair and damage it
No, self-rising flour cannot be converted back into all-purpose flour. Salt and a leavening agent, usually baking powder, are added to regular flour to make self-rising flour, and cannot be removed by any practical method.
Self-rising flour (usually) has baking powder mixed into it in a certain ratio. Baking powder is used for rising baking such as cookies, biscuits, cakes, etc. It isn't appropriate for use with yeast because yeast is a raising agent. Baking powder creates gases that bubble and puff up baking by way of a chemical reaction. Yeast is a form of bacteria that eat sugar and excrete CO2, which is a gas, that puffs up baking by way of a biological reaction. If you used self-raising flour with yeast you would have two competing forms of raising agent - and I have no idea what kind of mess you'd find in your oven afterwards!
No you can't. It'll mess up the chemistry. You can use 1/2 baking soda 1/2 cream of tar tar I use this in all my baking as my mother never bought baking powder when I was a kid. should be two parts cream of tartar per one part baking soda. ex: 1/2 tsp. baking soda, 1 tsp. cream of tartar. Baking soda by itself is not acidic enough to react with all the basic ingredients in the recipe. Unless you add acidity by adding cream of tartar, the cornbread won't rise as much because not enough carbon dioxide will be produced.
you cant because there is no substitute for eggs in baking
baking soda it is a soda but it cant drink
it is in time tangled i cant tell you where im sorry
yes however you might need to add some baking soda or baking powder to the recipe Yeah, I'd add 1 to 1 1/2 tsp baking powder to each cup of flour if the recipe calls for self rising and you are using all purpose.
you cant because of its job to help make the pancakes fluffy.