Juice is never stored right up to the top of the bottle to allow for the expansion of gases that may occur during fermentation or temperature changes. This headspace helps prevent pressure buildup, which could lead to bursting or leaking. Additionally, leaving space can minimize the risk of oxidation and spoilage, preserving the juice's flavor and freshness.
You didn't say that the bottle is completely full of juice, but I will assume that it is. Otherwise it will be impossible to answer. One liter contains 1000 milliliters. You multiply the liters by 1000, which means move the decimal point three places to the right. So 1.89 liters = 1890 milliliters.
Oh, dude, you're asking the real important questions now! So, like, one lime usually gives you around 2 tablespoons of juice, and a typical bottle of lime juice concentrate has about 8 tablespoons in it. So, like, you'd need roughly a quarter of that bottle to match the juice from one lime. But hey, who's really counting when it comes to squeezing limes, right?
Providing juices are stored correctly they will keep their nutritional value for up to 3 days. The important thing with juice storage is reducing contact with air, so make sure you fill your air tight juice container right up to the top before placing the lid on and putting it in the fridge. You will know that your juice has begun to oxidate when it changes colour becoming darker.
You should find it under the passenger side front seat, just pull it forward as if you were getting in the back, and there should be a bottle jack right there. Hope this helps.
No, lemon juice is acidic in its own right.
A soda bottle (the ones you drink right from the bottle).
This thing is so boltagious i can't even think right now but tis question sadly is never going to be solved.
no
Because, their parents feed their child bottled juices which consist of sugar and they give the bottle to their infant when they sleep so they "suck" the juice and they don't brush their teeth right. So, yeah their teeth becomes a nasty color
No
When you mix water and orange juice you get watered down or diluted orange juice. If there is much more water than juice, you just get a yellowish water with a faint orange flavor. It will not be harmful but it will not taste very good. If you have about 10 percent juice and the rest is water, you an add some sugar and maye citric acid (sour salt) for tartness and it would be similar to buying orange drinks but at a great saving. It just won't have the right color. You can buy a little bottle of orange food coloring, add a drop to the orange drink at it will look normal again.
The right amount of water to use for a successful bottle flip is typically around one-third to halfway full. This amount of water helps create the right balance and weight distribution for the bottle to flip and land upright.