sept 9,2014
The 'M' on M&M's floats in water because it is made of edible ink printed on rice paper, which is lightweight and buoyant. The rice paper does not dissolve quickly in water, allowing the 'M' to stay afloat.
The rice needs to absurd water to get bigger or it would burn
Rice needs a lot of water to grow. Rice is generally grown in swamps because those have a lot of water. Rice would not do well in a desert area, for example.
Rice cooks by steaming or by being in boiling water. The rice absorbs the hot water, softening the rice grains and cooking the starch. Uncooked rice would be very difficult to eat and digest.
4 cups of rice = 6 cups of water / divide both sides by 4 1 cup of rice = 1.5 cups of water
One kilogram of rice equals about five cups of rice. Using a two to one formula, 10 cups of water would be needed to cook the rice.
If you are using basic white rice, 1/2 fill a saucepan with water and bring to the boil. Pour 1-3 cups of rice in and when boiling point is reached, reduce heat. Keep on a low boil for 10 minutes exactly. Decant rice into a sieve and drain it . It will be near perfect.
To separate a mixture of salt and rice, you can use the method of dissolving the salt in water. When you add water to the mixture, the salt will dissolve while the rice will remain intact. Then, you can filter the mixture to separate the rice from the salty water. Finally, you can evaporate the water to obtain the salt.
The purpose of weeding in rice fields were so the rice would receive the full amount of water. The weeds could not steal any of the water, so the rice could grow to its full potential.
No because rice water is water with some parts of rice and rice does nothing to your hair
Usually when you cook rice it's cooked until the grains have absorbed all the water you have added. If you've added too much water then it would be ok to drain the extra water as long as the rice is tender. If you're cooking long grain white rice, use the ratio of 1 cup of rice to 2 cups water, then cook 'til all water is gone.