1 can potato soup
1 soup can of milk
1 chicken bouillon cube
1 large cucumber, peeled and chopped (approximately 1 3/4 cup)
1 c. half and half
In a heavy sauce pan combine soup, milk, bouillon cube and cucumber. Cook over low heat, stirring occasionally, for about 10 minutes or until cucumber is partially cooked and soup is very hot. Half fill a blender container and whirl until smooth. Repeat with the remaining soup until all is blended smooth. Cover and chill. Just before serving, stir in half and half.
Watermelon is the answer
In salt water, the cells in the cucumber will lose water and the cucumber will begin to wilt or droop or feel 'flat'.
there is a high water conecntration in the ditilled water and a low water concentration inside the cucumber so the water molecules will move from outside the cucumber to inside the cucumber through the semi permeable membrane by osmosis.
A cucumber consists of 96% water. -Snapple Real Fact #839
It obviously depends on the size of the cucumber but they are often 90% water.
As the cucumber is already almost totally water, I assume the cucumber would eventually go soft and mushy - and probably covered with algae.
Since you grate the cucumber in tzatziki, you can use frozen if you make sure to drain it very well after it's thawed and grated. It would also be good to put the thawed, grated cucumber into a paper towel and squeeze as much water as possible out of it. If you don't it will make the tzatziki too thin.
If a cucumber is placed in distilled water, the water molecules will flow into the cell by osmosis. This happens because the distilled water solution has a lower osmotic pressure than the cucumber cell.
Water molecules would move out of the cucumber slice and into the salt water by the process of osmosis. This is because the concentration of salt is higher in the salt water, causing water to move from an area of higher concentration (inside the cucumber slice) to an area of lower concentration (the salt water).
Tissue make the thin cucumber slice flexible
no its 95% water
Your cucumber plant may be drooping due to lack of water, excessive heat, or nutrient deficiencies. Make sure to water it regularly, provide shade during hot days, and fertilize it appropriately to help it recover.