Owning a pet can be intimidating at times. Many things that are, for the most part, innocuous to human beings can be seriously harmful to our furry pals. The artificial sweetener xylitol is just one such example. The sugar replacement can even bring fatal consequences to some pets.
Black truffle honey is like the liquid gold of the kitchen world. Use black truffle honey with help from a New York City wine and cheese expert in this free video clip.
The Norway maple (Acer platanoides), the red maple (Acer rubrum) and the sugar maple (Acer saccharum) are all species of maple that range widely across the northern and eastern parts of North America, and the three species have much in common. Two of them, however, are native North American species prized for their attractiveness and hardiness, while the third is considered a nuisance alien species.
Agave sweetener isn't measured the same way you measure sugar, even though it is a sugar substitute. Measure agave sweetener compared to sugar with help from a food host and private chef in Los Angeles in this free video clip.
Roasted spaghetti squash with brown sugar and olive oil requires you to begin by picking up a nice batch of spaghetti. Make roasted spaghetti squash with brown sugar and olive oil with help from a nutrition and physical fitness expert in this free video clip.
The honeylocust (Gleditsia triacanthos) and the maple (Acer spp.) are deciduous trees commonly used for landscaping throughout the United States. Both produce colorful fall foliage and are often grown as shade trees. The honeylocust is a fast-growing tree that reaches more than 70 feet tall. Some maple trees exceed 100 feet, but there are also smaller species that grow less than 20 feet tall. Although the honeylocust and maple are similar in some ways, they do have a number of differences.
Agave nectar is a natural sweetener that is low on the glycemic index. Store agave nectar with help from an experienced culinary professional in this free video clip.
Just because you're baking doesn't mean that you're going to end up using a lot of sugar. Bake with sugar substitutes with help from a professor at the University of Idaho in Coeur d'Alene and Boise, Idaho in this free video clip.
Just because you want to make juice doesn't mean that you're going to have to use a lot of sugar. Find out about juice that you can easily make without sugar with help from a chef and owner of a catering service in this free video clip.
Sugar lip conditioner is designed to be used in a very specific way for the absolute best results. Use sugar lip conditioner with help from a Los Angeles-based makeup artist in this free video clip.
Nothing tastes quite as good as oven-cooked bacon and maple syrup. Make oven-cooked bacon and maple syrup with help from a culinary professional in this free video clip.
Many pumpkin seed recipes use brown sugar as a primary ingredient. Learn about a pumpkin seed recipe that uses brown sugar with help from a passionate culinary professional in this free video clip.
Devil's food cupcakes typically use brown sugar and butter cream as primary ingredients. Make devil's food cupcakes with brown sugar and butter cream with help from an experienced baking professional in this free video clip.
Scottish scones traditionally use ingredients like milk, flour, sugar and butter as primary ingredients. Make Scottish scones with milk, flour, sugar and butter with help from the head chef and principal owner of YaDa Chef in this free video clip.
Bubble gum pink lips naturally lend themselves to a few different gorgeous makeup looks. Find out what eye makeup looks good with bubble gum pink lips with help from the creator and CEO of Rae Cosmetics in this free video clip.
You really haven't lived until you've tried chicken skewers with delicious peanut butter, brown sugar and olive oil. Make chicken skewers with peanut butter, brown sugar and olive oil with help from a celebrity chef and lifestyle expert in this free video clip.
Roasted sweet potato with maple syrup and butter needs to be cooked in a very particular way for the best possible results. Learn about roasted sweet potatoes with maple syrup and butter with help from an executive chef in this free video clip.
Making syrup with strawberries requires you to combine strawberries, sugar and water. Make syrup with strawberries with help from a professional chef in this free video clip.
Giving a newborn honey can actually be a great way to accomplish a few different interesting things. Learn about giving a newborn honey with help from a family case worker in this free video clip.
Making balsamic syrup at home is a lot more straightforward of a process than you might think. Learn how to make balsamic syrup with help from a true culinary adventurer in this free video clip.
Sugar frost grapes require you to first start with the proper kind of grape for this process. Learn how to sugar frost grapes with help from a personal chef in this free video clip.
Caramelized bananas with brown sugar and ice cream make a delicious snack for any time of day. Prepare caramelized bananas with brown sugar and ice cream with help from a therapist and wellness chef in this free video clip.
Sugar cane must be able to guzzle water to flourish. Due to climatic reasons and irrigation management, sugar cane is grown commercially in Florida, Louisiana, Texas and Hawaii in the United States. According to Agmrc.org, an agricultural resource site, the 2010 sugar cane crop in the U.S. totaled approximately 27.9 million tons.
One part of the process of making distilled products is filtering the distillate liquid through a charcoal filter. Charcoal is the product made after you heat hardwood chunks of wood to the point of releasing steam and gases without burning them. The miniscule cracks and crevices act as a filter for the liqueur. Sugar maple is a hardwood found mostly in the northeastern United States. You can make your own charcoal filter with sugar maple wood and simple materials.
Science experiments for preschoolers pose a unique challenge. The experiments have to be intelligent enough to induce some knowledge and relevant information into the minds of the children, yet simple enough for the tiny tots to easily grasp that information. Such experiments need to be tailor-made for the young minds and, hence, must be much different from science experiments designed for older students. One of the simplest and most effective experiments for preschoolers is a basic frozen salt and sugar experiment, which shows kids the different effects these common, everyday items have on elements such as water and ice.
Methanol is a common chemical additive in fuels and household products. In its pure form, the alcohol is highly flammable and has a colorless flame. It can be made from almost any organic product, but it must be produced in a well-ventilated area, such as outdoors or in controlled laboratory setting because of the risk of explosion. Methanol can be made from a sugar solution, but yeast and pectin must be present for the necessary chemical reaction.
Potatoes are starchy vegetables, and starches are compounds formed from sugars. You can soak the starch in potatoes to extract some of these sugars. George Carver described the process used for such conversion in November 1936. While both potatoes and sweet potatoes are high in starch, sweet potatoes have a higher sugar content so they are better for making sugar.
Honey is one of the longest-lasting foods in your cupboard, remaining safe and palatable for years as long as it's sealed in moisture-tight packaging. The water content of honey is approximately 20 percent when it's sold, according to the National Honey Board, and it doesn't contain enough moisture for mold or bacteria to grow. Over time it will crystalllize as one of the sugars precipitates out of the liquid honey. This is natural and harmless, and is easily reversed.
Table salt and table sugar are both commonly found in the home. While both are white in appearance, the composition of salt is different that that of sugar. By dissolving table salt and table sugar in ordinary tap water you can see how each reacts, as this will differentiate them.
Peek in just about any kitchen pantry, and you’ll see the same staples: salt, pepper and sugar. We crave sugar, whether it’s in our coffee, tea or oatmeal, or sprinkled on toast with cinnamon. Sugar may taste delightful and please a sweet tooth, but its nutritious counterpart, honey, has just as much sweetness along with some additional health benefits.
It's best to discover a gum stain on your jeans before it goes through the entire laundry process. However, there may be a time when you wash your jeans with gum in the pockets, or you miss the stain until after the dryer. Running your stained jeans through the dryer likely sets the stain, which can make it more difficult to remove. With a little work, though, you can remove the stain, even after you put your jeans through the dryer.
Sugar work is one of the most technically demanding aspects of a pastry chef's job. Chefs use several varieties of sugar products, from dough-like gum paste and pastillage to pulled, blown and cast sugar. These products are all used in different ways to create decorative effects, but the most dramatic of all might be the glass-like creations made with blown or cast sugar. Each technique requires a sugar that is perfectly clear and free of bubbles, which is difficult to achieve.
Rosh Hashana is a two-day Jewish celebration commonly referred to as the Jewish New Year. It is considered the birthday of the world and is a serious celebration where the world is judged for the coming year. Like many Jewish holidays and traditions, Rosh Hashana features a number of customs including the honey jar, which symbolizes hope for a sweet year. Honey jar crafts can help you decorate your Rosh Hashana table while helping to provide some enjoyable activities for your family.
Beets began their ascension to sugar-beet status halfway through the 18th century when Andreas Margraff, a German chemist, found out that sugar equal to the kind that sugarcane provides could be extracted from the root vegetable. The discovery was important because beets do not require a tropical climate to thrive. European sugar production became viable, making the sweet condiment economically accessible to more people. The plant’s roots and greens are also edible, and probably your reason for growing it. Digging beets out of the ground is a simple matter. Just make sure you time it right.
Both white and brown sugar require special storage containers to help protect them from moisture. Air, which hardens brown sugar, will cause both white and brown sugar to lump or form clumps. Thus, both must be stored in rustproof, airtight containers to extend their shelf lives and make them easier to add to drinks and use in recipes. In addition to using the proper containers to store sugar, you can add several well-known items to the jar to help prevent it from lumping.
Barbecue, a staple at tailgating parties, is a kaleidoscope of flavors and textures. There are as many variations between ’cue in different regions of the country as there are between accents and politics. The diversity within a region can be equally dramatic. Take the South, for example. Texans prefer beef to pork on the grill, while in some parts of North Carolina, the sauce is mostly vinegar with nary a tomato to be found. What about the so-called Deep South? There are no absolutes -- ingredients and techniques are adopted and adapted across state lines -- but trends distinguish a…
Brown sugar is a kitchen staple, especially for people who do a lot of baking. It has a higher moisture content than granulated white sugar, which has a dry, sandy consistency. Fresh brown sugar should pack easily when pressed, hold a packed shape for several seconds after being released, but still crumble evenly on contact. Excess moisture causes brown sugar to clump. Similarly, a lack of adequate moisture causes brown sugar to form rock-hard clumps. With proper storage and effective troubleshooting, brown sugar can remain usable for a long time.
Although sugar cane is often thought of strictly as a tropical plant, it can be grown outdoors as far north as South Carolina, Kentucky and Tennessee. However, Louisiana is the furthest north sugar cane can be planted as a dependable crop. For other locations, sugar cane can be grown as an indoor plant,
Cooking foods high in sugar on the stovetop usually results in a sticky mess. Leaving foods unattended or accidentally spilling them can cause the sugar water to fall directly on the hot burner, which burns the sugar water and creates an unsightly black and sticky stain. The burnt sugar water hardens even more once the surface cools. While the stain may look to be permanent, it is possible to restore the stovetop to its original condition.
A science project often takes something that's familiar to students and looks at it in a new way to answer science-related questions. For instance, bubble gum is something that most people have chewed at least once in their lifetime. If bubble gum is something that you frequently enjoy, you can incorporate it into a science project that gives interesting insight into the habit. Conduct your experiments while you chew gum in an effort to answer your questions.
Hard brown bumps on plant stems and leaves are characteristic of an infestation of armored scale insects. The hard covering protects the tiny insects underneath, which suck plant juices. Other types of scale, such as cottony scale and mealybugs are more easily dealt with, because their coverings are easily dispatched with a dab or spray of rubbing alcohol. Brown scale requires other measures.
School science fairs can be horribly dull, with the same experiments appearing before the judges year after year. When you've seen one clay volcano belching red goo, you've seen them all. Students can give their chances of winning by doing something a little different. This year, try doing an experiment involving bubble gum.
Bags of candy disks in a rainbow of colors and flavors are available at your local craft store, bake shop or specialty outlet, along with an endless variety of molds. You can make candies and pops in nearly any shape or character by melting the candy, transferring it to a mold and allowing it to set in a refrigerator or freezer. One side of most candies is flat when cooled, but some molds feature a back and a front that can be attached to create three-dimensional candies.
Corn syrup is a thick, gooey substance that is often used to sweeten various types of recipes. If you have corn syrup on or in a glass, it can be a little aggravating to clean. Corn syrup that is left on a glass begins to crystallize over time. A few common, inexpensive household products can help remove either thick, wet corn syrup or dried, crystallized syrup.
Sugar maples are known for their spectacular crimson and gold autumn colors, for excellent shade, and for their sap, which is rendered into syrup. The tree’s wood is hard and sturdy, and the tree typically needs little maintenance as it matures. Because sugar maples have a strong sap flow in spring, they are best pruned in late fall or early winter, after leaves have fallen. Dead or diseased branches, however, may be removed any time of the year.
The Washington Monument is a structure in Washington D.C. located on the National Mall, a historic district surrounded with world-renowned museums and other historic monuments. It stands 555 feet tall and took 37 years to complete due to budget and political issues. Easily replicate the simple obelisk structure with ordinary sugar cubes for a school project, or just to learn about the history. The shape of the sugar cubes makes them easy to assemble and durable once glued.
Do you have a sweet tooth? You can gratefully thank sugar processors for that. Refined white sugar is used in a wide variety of foods and fermentation processes to add a sweet flavor to practically everything you eat. Sugar cane, sugar beets and syrup made from corn kernels (corn syrup) are all turned into the liquid or solid sugar people love so much. Processing sugar beets into granules or cubed sugar is big business in almost one half of the states in America.
Make arts and crafts time unique by using paint made with corn syrup as a natural alternative to regular paint. Corn syrup is typically used in foods to sweeten and soften them, but it has a place in the arts world as well. Corn syrup paint recipes are easy to make while being cost effective and non-toxic, making them safe for children.
Glitter globes are mostly associated with winter, but they are actually a craft that can be tailored to each season, depending on what you put in them. This project is fun for adults and children alike and is created using simple household items. When you make your glitter globes, mix the water with clear corn syrup. This will make the water denser and the glitter will trickle slowly through the water for a better effect.
Differentiate your instruction by using activities to teach your class. The experiments, when used in different subject areas, help students understand concepts in areas of study beyond the science class. For example, if your class is studying limestone caves, dissolve sugar to show how the caves were formed. Saturation is easier to understand when the student adds all the sugar he can to a solvent. Questions are answered when the students are actively involved in the educational process.