Quotation from: General Science

Written by: Bertha M. Clark


211. Baking Powders. If some cooking soda is put into lemon juice or
vinegar, or any acid, bubbles of gas immediately form and escape from
the liquid. After the effervescence has ceased, a taste of the liquid
will show you that the lemon juice has lost its acid nature, and has
acquired in exchange a salty taste. Baking soda, when treated with an
acid, is transformed into carbon dioxide and a salt. The various
baking powders on the market to-day consist of baking soda and some
acid substance, which acts upon the soda, forces it to give up its
gas, and at the same time unites with the residue to form a harmless
salt.

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