If you add more baking soda to a vinegar (acetic acid) and baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) mix there will only be a further reaction if there is more acetic acid available to react with the baking soda. If the acid was used up by the first amount of baking soda no further reaction can occur.
you should add baking soda because it makes the dough rise.
Baking soda is probably your best bet. The Bicarbonate is a weak base which will neutralize the acetic acid in the vinegar. There are other bases you can use as well, such as lye (sodium hydroxide) but baking soda is safest.
No. Baking powder is used to make floury things rise. Baking soda is used to add soda bubbles. But Baking Soda and Bicarbonate of Soda are the same thing.
H2CO3 + C6H12O6 react.
'Soda' refers to baking soda.
One could add baking soda to canned beans, but it is impossible to imagine why one would do so.
No; the baking soda needs to be blended evenly with the dry ingredients before the liquid ingredients are added, before baking.
Baking soda is already an ingredient of baking powder so by mixing the two you would be simply changing the proportion of baking soda to baking powder. It will make no real difference to the outcome if you make up the volume of raising agent the recipe calls for with any proportion of baking powder to baking soda. As a safeguard you may like to add a teaspoon of white vinegar or a tablespoon of yoghurt or buttermilk to a cupcake recipe made with baking soda - the acid in the vinegar/yoghurt/buttermilk will react with the Soda to release carbon dioxide which will make you cupcakes rise.
Use a dry salt of citric acid - like sodium citrate. Add water. THEN they react.
Add vinegar
To replace for example 3 teaspoons of baking powder with baking soda, mix 1 teaspoon of baking soda with 2 teaspoons of cream of tartar.