Tomato Juice is great for skin. A tomato juice mask can be used on a persons face overnight. The tomato juice helps keep the skin healthy. The easiest way to use the tomato on the face is to cut the tomato in half and wipe the juice directly on the face.
Hell no. It will rust
Kosher wine or kosher grape juice
you will need to define high amounts...(no, remember everything in moderation)
Try to do some effective natural home remedies which will help you out. 1. Massage with ripe papaya or lemon juice all over your skin to help get rid of wrinkles. 2. Allow pineapple juice to dry on your face for about 15 to 20 minutes and then wash it off. 3. Every night before going for sleeping, apply coconut oil or olive oil all over the body including face. 4. Simply massage with fresh milk and lime juice combination all over the face, let it sits for 20 minutes before rinsing off with warm water.
Home canned tomato juice can separate due to several factors, primarily the natural settling of solids and liquids over time. This separation can occur if the tomatoes used had varying water content or if the juice wasn't blended well before canning. Additionally, the absence of sufficient acid, which helps maintain the juice's consistency, can contribute to separation. Proper mixing and following safe canning guidelines can help minimize this issue.
if it's your shoes that smell, put orange juice in your shoes. Then let them sit over night. Then spill out the orange juice and the smell in the morning.
yes. It can make it turn a very nice shade of red, just blend it up and pour it over you. You'll be looking like a retard in no time!
While pure (distilled) water is not a terribly good conductor, the acid in the Tomato Juice will partially ionize the water in it. The result is a "fairly" good conductor, but still nowhere near as good as copper, silver, aluminum, etc. So, yes, you easily get enough current to flow through tomato juice to give you a nasty shock or light a small bulb, but over any large distances, most of the electrical energy will be lost as heat due to resistance. While pure (distilled) water is not a terribly good conductor, the acid in the tomato juice will partially ionize the water in it. The result is a "fairly" good conductor, but still nowhere near as good as copper, silver, aluminum, etc. So, yes, you easily get enough current to flow through tomato juice to give you a nasty shock or light a small bulb, but over any large distances, most of the electrical energy will be lost as heat due to resistance.
You can encourage tomato plants to set fruit rather than over grow by making sure the plants are getting the right temperature. Tomato plants should be set in an area where the daytime temperatures are under 80 degrees F and the night time temperatures do not fall below 55 degrees F.
No. Try some of below tips. 1. A combination of lemons, tomatoes and witch hazels 2. A paste of ground drumstick pods and leaves mixed well with few drops of lime juice 3. A mixture of lemon juice and groundnut oil 4. Application of lemon juice in a glass of boiled milk 5. Apply a few drops of fresh mint juice all over the face 6. A paste of two teaspoon of roasted pomegranate powder with 8 to 10 drops of lemon juice
Impossible question. The density would varie from juice to juice depending on concentration and ingredients. It will always be less than water. Density of water is 1. ONe gram per ml of substance. Or mass over volume. The formula used to measure density uses water as starting point. Density of a liquid can also varie from pressure and temperature. If you take your tomato juice and place it on a balance to determine mass, subtract the mass of container and then devide remainder by the volume of the juice. This can be found in ml of juice (Which would be on side of can) your density will be (....)grams per millileter. It will be very close to one gram per ml because tomato juice is made up of mostly water.
Yes you do water tomato plants but don't over fill with water