Yes, chemically they are sodium chloride (NaCl).
Table salt is granulated and refined halite (sodium chloride mineral).
Some common granulated salts include table salt (sodium chloride), kosher salt (coarse-grained sodium chloride), sea salt (from evaporated seawater), and Himalayan pink salt (mined from salt deposits in the Himalayan region).
That is about 9.6 cups
One and a half cups plus a tablespoon, if you're using plain granulated table salt.
It depends- on temperature, stillness of the solute, and size of the salt grains. If everything is controlled, the smaller grains should dissolve quicker
There should be no reason that granulated table salt would break down wood. It could scratch the finish if left on the floor. If the salt was mixed with a liquid it may have been the liquid that caused an issue.
Granulated sodium chloride, more commonly known as "table salt".
salt made into granules
Granulated granulated garlic is not the same as garlic salt. Granulated garlic is just garlic that has been dried, processed and granulated. Garlic salt is processed , dried garlic mixed with sea salt or other salts.
table salt Any difference; table salt, rock salt, sea salt are the same chemical compound - sodium chloride, NaCl.
Granulated table salt is a common ingredient in cooking and baking due to its small, uniform crystals that dissolve easily. It enhances flavor, helps to preserve food, and provides essential minerals like sodium. Additionally, its fine texture makes it easy to measure and incorporate into recipes.
Yes. Rock salt, which is largely the same as table salt, will dissolve in water.