yes. To color eggs, it's the acid of vinegar that determines how well the dye takes. So rice vinegar can be used just as well as any other vinegar.
For Easter egg dyeing, you should use 1 tablespoon of vinegar for every cup of water when preparing the dye solution.
It might explode...
When an egg is soaked in vinegar, a chemical reaction occurs where the acid in the vinegar reacts with the calcium carbonate in the eggshell. This reaction dissolves the eggshell, leaving only the semi-permeable membrane around the egg intact.
The egg shell is basically calcium. Vinegar is a weak acid, and "etches" the calcium egg shell slightly. Since the water is colored, it leaves behind that coloring in the slightly softened surface of the egg shell.
eggshells (solute) vinegar (solvent)
Because, to dye something, you need some sort of pigment/color. The food coloring is the dye; the vinegar is a weak acid which helps the dye to stick to the surface of the egg.
No, not at all. Easter egg rolls are rolls of Easter eggs, not egg rolls of Easter.
vinegar
well you cant make an Easter egg only during the 2008 Easter event but if you got the 2006 Easter event you can turn into an Easter egg
In the term 'Easter egg hunt' there are no verbs. The noun Easter is used as a proper adjective to describe 'egg', and the noun egg is used as and adjective to describe the noun'hunt'.The word hunt is both a noun and a verb; in the term 'Easter egg hunt' the word hunt is a noun, for example:Subject: The Easter egg hunt is scheduled for Sunday.Object: We plan to go to the Easter egg hunt.AnagrammaticallyThe letters in Easter egg hunt can spell "eats" and "ate."The other past tense verbs are set, sat, and taught (but none have their present form).
Vinegar is acidic. An acid will dissolve (partially at least) the calcium of the shell.
When an egg is placed in vinegar, the shell dissolves due to the vinegar's acidity. This causes the egg to increase in size as the vinegar penetrates the egg's membrane, causing it to swell.