No, soaking a plant seed in food dye will not make it sprout with color. The color of the plant comes from pigments produced by the plant itself, not from external dyes. The dye may penetrate the seed coat and reach the embryo, but it will not affect the color of the sprout once it germinates. Additionally, using food dye on plant seeds may harm the seed and affect its ability to germinate successfully.
No of course not
A sprout is any early growth of a plant and it refers to all plants. Some plants are enjoyed as food when they are at the "sprout" stage, such as beans, broccoli, alfalfa, etc. The Brussel sprout is an edible outgrowth of the plant's main stem. Every country on the globe grows sprouts. Different cultures use sprouts as food more than other cultures.
To color pasta, you can add food coloring to the pasta dough while you are making it. Simply mix the food coloring into the dough until you achieve the desired color. Alternatively, you can also dye cooked pasta by soaking it in a mixture of water and food coloring.
Green?
hat is the process does soaking and storing food in brine
It is called germination. The seed provides food for the first stages of growth, until the new root system can provide nutrients for the plant to grow.
Depends on the plant. White dasies will change color very quickly.
They are vegetables.
No, it would need to inherit a gene to change its colour.
Yes and no. Pikmin are a cross between plant and animal: they sprout from seeds and grow flowers like plants, yet have eyes and consume food like an animal.
It is big because before leaves sprout, the bulb is the source of food because without leaves, there is no photosynthesis thus no food unless the bulb feeds the plant (which as I said before, it does). The bulb of the onion also stores energy. Hope this satisfies!
Because towns sprout up where thBecause towns sprout up where the food is plentiful. e food is plentiful.