Sugar sucks out moisture
well if they're cut,the juice from the strawberries will get on the sugar and then the sugar will get wet......
I guess raspberries, lemon juice, sugar, and water.
it may create a very un-subjonctivized substance, with sugar and strawberry juice. =]
Sprinkling sugar on fresh strawberries draws out the natural juices from the berries through a process known as osmosis. Osmosis occurs when the sugar draws out water from the strawberries, creating a sweet syrupy liquid around the berries. This process enhances the flavor and juiciness of the strawberries.
151.2 grams of raspberries in one cup
Add some low carb strawberries or raspberries (frozen works great) and some sugar free Maple Syrup and you've got a delicious breakfast.
Lemons are sour because they don't have much sugar; instead, they are tart due to having a lot of citric acid (hence citrus fruit). Strawberries can be a bit tart, too, but not nearly as much as lemons, so strawberries have more sugar than lemons do.
Osmosis explains the process by which sugar molecules move from an area of high concentration (syrup) to an area of low concentration (strawberries). When strawberries are placed in sugar syrup, water inside the strawberries moves out through osmosis to balance the concentration, causing the strawberries to absorb the sugar and become sweeter.
No, unless you add sugar.
Wheat, maize, rice, olives, grapes, apples, peaches, citrus, sugar beets, tomatoes, mushrooms, truffles, strawberries, raspberries, chestnuts and hazelnuts
We can separate the sugar to sugar cane juice by evaporation juice from sugar cne.
Watering strawberries with orange juice a day before harvest can add a sweet citrus taste. BUt... long term watering with orange juice will kill most plants dew to the high PH and sugar levels. The sugar will likely breed bacteria and the acid burns the plants vessels.