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19 July, 10:56

the directions in the candy recipe for pralines instruct the cook to remove the pot containing the candy mixture from the heat when the candy micture reaches the soft-ball stage. the soft ball stage corresponds to the temperature of 236°F. after the soft ball stage is reached, the pecans and vanilla are added. can a celsius thermometer with a range of - 10°C be used to determine when the soft ball stage is reached in the candy micture? why or why not?

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  1. 19 July, 14:31
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    A Celsius thermometer with a range of - 10°C cannot be used to determine when the soft ball stage is reached in the candy mixture.

    Temperature is most commonly measured with a thermometer that has two different scales: Fahrenheit and Celsius. Water freezes at 0°C and boils at 100°C on the Celsius scale and freezes at 32°F and boils at 212°F on the Fahrenheit scale.

    Temperature of 236°F corresponds to 113.3°C. Now a Celsius scale has a maximum of 100°C on the thermometer. Hence a Celsius thermometer cannot be used to measure a temperature that corresponds to 236°F.
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