In the past, people boiled water using various methods, primarily over an open flame. They would place water in containers made of clay, metal, or stone and set them directly over a fire, allowing the heat to bring the water to a boil. Additionally, some cultures utilized hot stones, which were heated in the fire and then submerged into water, a method known as "stone boiling." This technique was especially useful when suitable cooking vessels were not available.
Both salt water and regular water will boil. However, salt water will have a higher boiling point than regular water due to the presence of salt in the solution.
It takes more heat to boil water than to simply heat water. Unless the water is already at its boiling point.
Whe you boil water, molecules of water "escape" into the atmosphere. The molecular structure of water is unaffected by boiling.
Place the container of water in a vacuum & it should start to boil at room temperature.
vacuum is measured in inches of mercury. sea level is zero. water will boil at 212F. as negative pressure or elevation increases the boiling temp. of water decreases. if you had a pressure reading of 29.7 in" of mercury the water will boil at 192F. if you had a pressure reading of 10 in" of mercury water will boil at 32F
I'm going to assume that you aren't looking for the answer "to cook in it". People boil water to kill bacteria.
The past tense of boil is boiled.
The past tense of boil is boiled.
To boil the water, most commonly used is a tea pot. Otherwise, you could use a small pot, and some people put a mug full of water into a microwave to boil, too.
boiled
The past participle is boiled.
How to Boil Water was created in 1993.
soak some tobako in water over night. then, boil off the water until you have a thick brown past. very potent.
sea water boil at 105 c
The past participle is boiled.
you boil it in water
Soda water boil.