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Flour, flowers

Flour, wheat. See Wheat (Triticum vulgare) flour Flowers of sulfur. See Sulfur Flowers of zinc. See Zinc oxide Fluorinated ethylene/propylene... [Pg.2128]

Sift together the flour, baking powder and salt. Stir in the elder flowers or berries. Add the remaining ingredients. Fill lightly greased muffin tins 2/3 full and bake in an oven preheated to 400 degrees F. for 25 minutes. [Pg.54]

The use of sulfur as a fuel in pyrotechnic compositions dates back over one thousand years, and the material remains a widely-used component in black powder, colored smoke mixtures, and fireworks compositions. For pyrotechnic purposes, the material termed "flour of sulfur" that has been crystallized from molten sulfur is preferred. Sulfur purified by sublimation - termed "flowers of sulfur" - often contains significant amounts of oxidized, acidic impurities and can be quite hazardous in high-energy mixtures, especially those containing a chlorate oxidizer [11]. [Pg.43]

An excellent grade of sulfur is the very fine dusting type sold st nurseries, rden-supply houses, etc. as a pesticide This nearly white flour Is both cheap and excellent It la to be preferred to the "flowers of sulfur" sold in drugstores at higher cost, althou this yellower type will serve the purpose ... [Pg.258]

Fisons NC 6897 Flame Smoke No. 1 Flame Smoke No. 2 Flea Typhus Fleaborne Typhus Fleckfieber Flo-mor Floridine Florocid Florocide Flour Sulfur Flowers of Sulfur Flowers of Sulphur Flozenges Flridine Fluonatril... [Pg.67]

Flour, wheat. See Wheat (Triticum vulgare) flour Flow Agent WR-100. See Acrylates copolymer Flower of paradise. See Lawsone Flowers of antimony. See Antimony trioxide Flowers of sulfur. See Sulfur Flowers of zinc. See Zinc oxide FlowSorb . See Carbon, activated Flowtone R. See Hydrogenated castor oil Floxin isovalerate. See a-Amylcinnamyl isovalerate Flubenzimine CAS 37893-02-0... [Pg.1826]

Synonyms Brimstone Flour sulfur Flowers of sulfur Precipitated sulfur Soluble sulfur Sublimed sulfur Sulfur flower Sulfur flowers Sulfur soluble Sulfur sublimed Sulphur Wettable powder sulfur Classification Nonmetaiiic element Empirical S... [Pg.4265]

Suspensions of oxidizable particles (e.g., flour, coal dust, magnesium powder, zinc dust, carbon powder, and flowers of sulfur) in the air can constitute a powerful explosive mixture. These materials should be used with adequate ventilation and should not be exposed to ignition sources. Some solid materials, when finely divided, are spontaneously combustible if allowed to dry while exposed to air. These materials include zirconium, titanium, Raney nickel, finely divided lead (such as prepared by p5trolysis of lead tartrate), and catalysts such as activated carhon containing active metals and hydrogen. [Pg.62]

N-Acyl PE (APE) has been reported in wheat flour lipids (Bomstein, 1%5), soybean lipids (Anejae/ al., 1969), pea, and some other seeds (Dawson et al., 1969). It disappears rapidly on seed germination (Dawson et al., 1969). Dawson et al. (1969) reported as much as 13.3% of lipid phosphorus as APE in the mature seed of oat (A. sativa L.). Wilson and Rinne (1974) measured the phospholipids of developing soybean (Glycine max L.) up to 60 days after flowering (DAF) APE was always in excess of 50% of lipid phosphorus, but in the mature seed (75 DAF) there was an amazing drop to 4.8% of lipid phosphorus. [Pg.261]

Figure 11. DSC traces from flour dough (upper curve) and gluten-water mixture flower curves (a) pure gluten, (b) scaled to the actual content of the dough] obtained at 5 K min heating rate (modified from [22]). Figure 11. DSC traces from flour dough (upper curve) and gluten-water mixture flower curves (a) pure gluten, (b) scaled to the actual content of the dough] obtained at 5 K min heating rate (modified from [22]).

See other pages where Flour, flowers is mentioned: [Pg.348]    [Pg.454]    [Pg.253]    [Pg.137]    [Pg.48]    [Pg.24]    [Pg.469]    [Pg.371]    [Pg.374]    [Pg.262]    [Pg.218]    [Pg.594]    [Pg.470]    [Pg.76]    [Pg.374]    [Pg.375]    [Pg.116]    [Pg.527]    [Pg.271]    [Pg.544]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.322 ]




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