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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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i am trying to see how much weight is lost in 3 hours from a glass of
wine and do not have access to a scale sensitive enough something like 0.001 milligram would be ideal balance at 0 hours and weigh after say 3 hours--- nice to do it in a room with stable temperature ideally a rtelative humidity measuremet would be really helpful i will pay for the wine ( i like carlo rossi paisano) tia peter |
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> ilaboo plener writes:
> >i am trying to see how much weight is lost in 3 hours from a glass of >wine Why? ---= BOYCOTT FRANCE (belgium) GERMANY--SPAIN =--- ---= Move UNITED NATIONS To Paris =--- ********* "Life would be devoid of all meaning were it without tribulation." Sheldon ```````````` |
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> ilaboo plener writes:
> >i am trying to see how much weight is lost in 3 hours from a glass of >wine Why? ---= BOYCOTT FRANCE (belgium) GERMANY--SPAIN =--- ---= Move UNITED NATIONS To Paris =--- ********* "Life would be devoid of all meaning were it without tribulation." Sheldon ```````````` |
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![]() ilaboo wrote: > i am trying to see how much weight is lost in 3 hours from a glass of > wine and do not have access to a scale sensitive enough > > something like 0.001 milligram would be ideal > > > balance at 0 hours and weigh after say 3 hours--- > > nice to do it in a room with stable temperature > > ideally a rtelative humidity measuremet would be really helpful > > i will pay for the wine ( i like carlo rossi paisano) > > tia > peter Shawn Carlson, "Homemade Microgram Electrobalance". Scientific American, June 1996. Do it yourself and learn something. Or enroll in a community college chemistry class that has a lab with such balances. They are not cheap, and nobody who owns one is going to let just anybody use theirs. -- Chris Green |
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![]() ilaboo wrote: > i am trying to see how much weight is lost in 3 hours from a glass of > wine and do not have access to a scale sensitive enough > > something like 0.001 milligram would be ideal > > > balance at 0 hours and weigh after say 3 hours--- > > nice to do it in a room with stable temperature > > ideally a rtelative humidity measuremet would be really helpful > > i will pay for the wine ( i like carlo rossi paisano) > > tia > peter Shawn Carlson, "Homemade Microgram Electrobalance". Scientific American, June 1996. Do it yourself and learn something. Or enroll in a community college chemistry class that has a lab with such balances. They are not cheap, and nobody who owns one is going to let just anybody use theirs. -- Chris Green |
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![]() ilaboo wrote: > i am trying to see how much weight is lost in 3 hours from a glass of > wine and do not have access to a scale sensitive enough > > something like 0.001 milligram would be ideal > > > balance at 0 hours and weigh after say 3 hours--- > > nice to do it in a room with stable temperature > > ideally a rtelative humidity measuremet would be really helpful > > i will pay for the wine ( i like carlo rossi paisano) > > tia > peter Shawn Carlson, "Homemade Microgram Electrobalance". Scientific American, June 1996. Do it yourself and learn something. Or enroll in a community college chemistry class that has a lab with such balances. They are not cheap, and nobody who owns one is going to let just anybody use theirs. -- Chris Green |
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i came up with a very simple way to create a very sensitive scale
use a piece of glass fiber mount it on a straw ( perpendicular to the ground) place the stray in a hole put a piece of paper in such a position that the drop of the fiber cam be marked off place in draft free place now for the test glue a small amount of cotton on the tip of the fiber let the glue dry and the fiber level off make the position on the paper put as best you can one drop of distilled water on the cotton measure where the fiber droops to and time how long the fiber takes to come back to it's resting place then do the same with a drop of wine this should give us some idea how fast a drop of wine evaporates we can then use this information to ask the question what happens when you open a bottle of wine we know that some weight will be lost from the wine and some idea how fast it does it yes i know anyone could blow the particulars of the conclusions away but the reality is that cthuling etc on the web gives no answer as to the weight loss of wine when a bottle is opened or a glass of wine is left to stand i think we who love to cook need this information stay tuned |
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In article t>, ilaboo
> wrote: > i am trying to see how much weight is lost in 3 hours from a glass of > wine and do not have access to a scale sensitive enough There is a little bit of information in the FAQ: http://vsack.bei.t-online.de/rfc_faq0.html#4.7 -- Dan Abel Sonoma State University AIS |
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In article t>, ilaboo
> wrote: > i am trying to see how much weight is lost in 3 hours from a glass of > wine and do not have access to a scale sensitive enough There is a little bit of information in the FAQ: http://vsack.bei.t-online.de/rfc_faq0.html#4.7 -- Dan Abel Sonoma State University AIS |
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Dan Abel wrote:
> In article t>, ilaboo > > wrote: > > >>i am trying to see how much weight is lost in 3 hours from a glass of >>wine and do not have access to a scale sensitive enough > > > > There is a little bit of information in the FAQ: > > http://vsack.bei.t-online.de/rfc_faq0.html#4.7 > thanks for the tip i find it incredible that a study showed that it is possible for 85% of teh alsohol froma beverage could still be contained after cooking!!--would like to have more specific info take care and thanks again peter |
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ilaboo wrote:
> Dan Abel wrote: > >> In article t>, ilaboo >> > wrote: >> >>> i am trying to see how much weight is lost in 3 hours from a glass of >>> wine and do not have access to a scale sensitive enough >> >> There is a little bit of information in the FAQ: >> >> http://vsack.bei.t-online.de/rfc_faq0.html#4.7 >> > thanks for the tip <LOL> That's the same chart I posted a few days ago. Along with several more bits of information. How quickly they forget... <http://tinyurl.com/3rayl> Could it be that I'm in his killfile for pointing out his silly guesswork? Me? Serenity personified? <LOL> > i find it incredible that a study showed that it is possible for 85% of > teh alsohol froma beverage could still be contained after > cooking!!--would like to have more specific info Well, you can just sit there and wait for it to come to you, as you seem to enjoy doing, or you could go looking for it. Given your recent history with such things, I thought it would be good to just drop some in here. Confident in the suspicion that it won't matter a whit to your most wonderful speculations from a posture of utterly unspoiled ignorance, herewith some sources. Start by looking for a phase diagram for the alcohol-water system. Then see what's he <http://tinyurl.com/52q4p> <http://tinyurl.com/5xvvr> <http://tinyurl.com/4zufr> A paper to look at: Alcohol Retention in Food Preparation, Augustin, Jorg and Augustin, Evelyn, J. American Dietetic Association, Vol. 92 #4 (April 1992), p 486 - 488. > take care > and thanks again Hey. No sweat... Pastorio |
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bob
thanks for the info looked it all up still could not find anything specific about evaporation ( actually weight loss from a open bottle of wine --say at room temperature--over time. any suggestions how to do this in a simple kitchen would be appreciated.-- cthugling not helpful tia peter |
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bob
thanks for the info looked it all up still could not find anything specific about evaporation ( actually weight loss from a open bottle of wine --say at room temperature--over time. any suggestions how to do this in a simple kitchen would be appreciated.-- cthugling not helpful tia peter |
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ilaboo wrote:
> bob > > thanks for the info > looked it all up > still could not find anything specific about evaporation ( actually > weight loss from a open bottle of wine --say at room temperature--over > time. And you're not going to find anything authoritative that can be used to extrapolate from. Too many variables. No practical application. Pastorio > any suggestions how to do this in a simple kitchen would be appreciated.-- > > cthugling not helpful > > tia > peter |
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ilaboo wrote:
> bob > > thanks for the info > looked it all up > still could not find anything specific about evaporation ( actually > weight loss from a open bottle of wine --say at room temperature--over > time. And you're not going to find anything authoritative that can be used to extrapolate from. Too many variables. No practical application. Pastorio > any suggestions how to do this in a simple kitchen would be appreciated.-- > > cthugling not helpful > > tia > peter |
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