I personally would never use baking soda or baking soda as a substitute for flour because they have different uses. Plus, that much baking soda or baking powder and no flour would leave a horrible taste in your mouth. Baking soda and baking powder are only used to make food rise while cooking and only a small amount of each is needed. While flour is more for adding density and flavour. If you're looking for a substitute for regular wheat flour, I would suggest oat flour, corn flour or soy flour.
Use self-rising flour instead of all-purpose flour, and you can leave out the baking soda, baking powder, and salt.
You cannot use baking powder as a substitute for baking soda
You can try scrubbing the rubber with a mixture of baking soda and water or using a commercial rubber cleaner. Another option is to apply a mixture of hydrogen peroxide and powder laundry detergent, then leave the sneakers out in the sun to dry.
If you do not have cream of tartar, baking powder will work just as well, or better. If the recipe calls for both cream of tartar and baking soda, leave out the soda if you use baking powder - it already has soda in it.
Self-rising flour is a mix of flour and salt and a leavening agent (baking powder). Most recipes that mention self-rising flour leave out the baking powder. You can make your own cup with the following: 1 cup of all purpose flour 1 1/4 teaspoon of baking powder and a pinch of salt Happy Baking....
The original Nestlés Toll House cookies (chocolate chip cookies) recipe calls for baking soda, not baking powder. There is no substitute for baking soda or baking powder in a recipe. You have to have it.
It means when you have a liquid mixture, you leave this mixture, preferably in a cool place, until it becomes solid or hard, that means the mixture has set.
Baking powder is a leavening agent or rising agent. Some others are baking soda, yeast, beaten egg whites and other things. With out it your cookies will be thin, flat, hard and heavy, instead of light and/or crunchy. Baking powder is relatively slow acting, especially when compared to baking soda (sodium bicarbonate). Baking powder is a mixture of baking soda, a base, and cream of tartar, an acid, when mixed with a liquid the two combine and a gas, carbon dioxide,CO2, is released. The tiny bubbles make the dough rise. The liquid is usually added last thing before baking so the bubbles don't just dissipate into the air. The cookies go into a hot oven so the dough begins to set up and the bubbles separate the small particles of firm dough instead of just being baked as bubbles into the otherwise hard cookie.
Well, darling, you can't make acrylic powder out of baking soda. Acrylic powder is a specific polymer blend designed for nail enhancements, while baking soda is just a humble kitchen ingredient. If you want some DIY nail magic, stick to Pinterest and leave the chemistry to the professionals.
One is not better than the other. Baking soda will make the cookies crisper, and make them rise more. Baking powder will make them softer. Take your pick. I baked cookies with baking soda and it made the cookies look more like sticky bread than cookies. You absolutely can NOT use baking soda at all. Baking powder is for cookies, baking soda is for stuff you want to rise (like bread). The answer above is false.
Self-rising flour has baking soda, baking powder and salt added in. All-purpose flour does not have these ingredients, so you have to mix them in if the recipe calls for them. For recipes that call for all-purpose flour, and you are using self-rising flour, you can leave these ingredients out.