You can put the filling in a zip lock bag and snip off one corner. This allows you to squeeze the filling into the shell. It's usually easiest to fill one end and then turn the shell around and fill from the other end.
To stuff manicotti, first cook the pasta until it's slightly underdone. Then, fill a piping bag or plastic bag with the filling mixture, such as a mix of ricotta cheese, herbs, and seasonings. Cut a small hole in the corner of the bag and pipe the filling into the cooked manicotti shells. Place the filled shells in a baking dish, cover with sauce, and bake until heated through.
To fill manicotti, you can use a spoon to carefully stuff the cooked pasta tubes with a mixture of cheese, meat, or vegetables.
To make manicotti shells from scratch, mix flour, eggs, and water to form a dough. Roll out the dough thinly and cut it into rectangles. Boil the rectangles briefly, then fill them with a ricotta cheese mixture. Roll up the rectangles and place them in a baking dish with sauce. Bake until cooked through.
Yes electrons go on shells , that's the way the are organize . The more shells they fill the greater their atomic number .
coz d shells have lower energy level according to aufbau priciple
It depends on what you are planning to do with them. If you mean the already prepared tart shells, you can bake them on a cookie sheet for about 10-15 minutes, or until golden brown, and then fill them with whatever you want. If you're filling them with something like a spinach/feta combo, just saute your onions and spinach and whatever else first, mix in some cheese and fill the baked cups. Or, you can make the filling ahead, and fill the cups up and then bake them. It works either way.
Pie shells are a crust that is often used for pies.You can fill them up with apple,pumpkin,blueberry or varius fruits and fillings. :)
The moon is very big about 1/4 of the size of the Earth (it looks small because it is a long way away). The moon is also solid (like the Earth) and thus there is no room in it to be filled up with shotgun shells. If the moon was empty then you would have to turn 1/4 of the Earth into shotgun shells to fill the volume the Moon takes up.
Yes, nonmetals can gain electrons to fill their valence shells. By doing so, they can achieve a stable electron configuration, usually by reaching a full outer shell of electrons (usually 8 electrons, except for hydrogen and helium which only need 2 electrons).
otherwise they would puff up in the area that you want to fill
To fill their electron shells - this represents a lower energy state.
The positive and negative are attracted