Water has a fixed density (depending on temperature), and it is more dense than corn oil by a little bit. If corn oil is added to water, the density of the mixture will decrease. This applies to "room temperature" water and oil. No one should be pouring hot oil into water.
Hydrogenation
no it cannot. it can actually burn your cookies. you can use margerine though.
Crude oil can ignite and burn at temperatures above 150°C (300°F). The exact temperature can vary depending on the specific composition of the crude oil.
Yes, vegetable oil can burn. When heated beyond its smoke point, vegetable oil can catch fire and burn. It is important to use caution when cooking with oils and to follow recommended temperature guidelines to prevent accidents.
corn oil is made out of germ of corn.
Refined, Bleached, Deodorized Pure Corn Oil , a straight corn oil is clear and bright be used as a salad oil - the oil may be cooled to very low temperature without clouding or hazing , that is to -11 C, the oil does not have a heavy or oily mouth feel ( specific gravity is typically .922) a rather pleasant bland taste... add you you spice and flavoring... enjoy the salad.
Corn oil. A calorie is the amount of heat needed to raise the temperature of 1 gram of water 1 degree Celsius from a standard initial temperature. In one table or corn oil there are 120 calories, as in honey there are only 60. Corn oil has more calories than honey because oil is a lipid unlike honey, which was indicated in the brown bag test for lipids. Gram for gram, lipids yield 6 times more energy than carbohydrates, so oil (lipid) will have more calories than honey (carbohydrate).
Corn oil is all fat. There are no glucose sugars in corn oil or any other oil.
corn oil is more dense
Crude oil will typically start to ignite and burn at around 410 to 440 degrees Celsius (770 to 824 degrees Fahrenheit). However, the exact temperature can vary depending on the specific properties of the oil and the conditions in which it is burning.
Corn oil comes from the corn kernels themselves.