Sentences with phrase «drop in room temperature»

Not exact matches

Chocolate hardens when it drops in temperature to mid 70 ° F, so, if you add a flavoring oil that is room temperature (around 68 ° F) to melted chocolate (ranging from 88 ° F — 115 ° F), you will SHOCK the chocolate and it will SEIZE (get lumpy, get gritty or thicken up and get pasty) and be ruined.
The warm mist allows the room to regain it natural humidity level without causing a drop in temperature.
As the nights draw in we retreat earlier to our homes and as the temperature drops we turn the heating on and sit cozily in our living rooms heated to the recommended 21oC.
Seal the jar and keep it at room temperature for two days, then the bacteria needs a drop in temperature, move your jar to the basement or a cooler hallway.
Just dropping by because I tried this recipe this weekend (without the protein powder, using pb instead of hazelnut butter) and I noticed a HUGE difference in taste when they were at room temperature vs. refrigerated vs. frozen.
When temperatures start dropping, out come the chunky knit sweaters — but your living room and bedroom should be decked in knits, too.
A role that really captures meaning in the writer / director's attraction to long, drawn out discussion and conversation, Col. Hans Landa is an eerie sort of presence who seems to drop the temperature of a room once he enters it.
The whelping box needs to be in a warm room with no air stream and drops in temperature.
Its infrastructure offers you changing rooms, restrooms, showers, hydromassage facilities, pools with different temperatures, as well as waterfalls and drops, in a beautiful and fascinating natural landscape.
Woman I (1950 - 52) is given a wall, but the spot it occupies in the narrative marks the point in the show where the installation becomes confusing, loses concentration, and where large rooms turn into vast halls where even great works seem like orphans (the scale of the David Smith and Franz Kline room does these artists a disservice as the temperature drops and the corporate quality rises although the same works in another context would feel very different).
If you drop the temperature in the room to 15 degrees C, the human will reduce blood flow to his skin and start shivering.
Since the average gain is 1.6 and the gain drops as temperatures rise (look at the data), the resulting non linearity doesn't help your case, in fact it hurts it since the 1.6 becomes an upper bound on the incremental gain and doesn't leave any wiggle room to achieve the gain of 4.3 required for the CAGW hypothesis.
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