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1. egg 2. vanilla extract 3. unsweeten cocoa powder 4. unsalted butter 5. egg 6. vanilla 7. unsalted butter 8. vegetable shortening 9. light brown sugar 10. old fashion oat 11. shredded sweeten coconut

2006-12-12 14:28:19 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Chemistry

6 answers

Sounds like it is going to be one great cookie!

2006-12-12 14:30:52 · answer #1 · answered by istitch2 6 · 0 0

All the items you have listed are actually mixtures of organic compounds with trace amounts of inorganic material.

None of these are true compounds, since all these items can be broken down to different types of molecules. There is no one chemical formula for any of these.

2006-12-12 22:32:04 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

An organic chemical is any molecule which contains carbon except for carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide.

So all of the things in that recipe are organic.

BTW, what is that a recipe for? Oatmeal cookies?

2006-12-12 22:32:16 · answer #3 · answered by Egghead 4 · 0 0

All I know is that brown sugar is a type of refined sugar, just like normal table sugar. So brown sugar is sucrose, which has a chemical formula of C12H22O11.

2006-12-13 19:02:19 · answer #4 · answered by boring_trousers 1 · 0 0

A few of those items are listed twice. Anyway, I believe they are all organic. If you want to find the formulas, check out http://www.chemfinder.com

2006-12-12 22:32:20 · answer #5 · answered by Von Kempelen 5 · 0 0

if you are talking chemistry (not just the food industry meaning of the word "organic) then it is absolutely organic.. anything that has carbon in it, which is any living (or what was once living) thing will be organic/ have C in it.. as for the food industry meaning.. no idea

2006-12-12 22:31:14 · answer #6 · answered by asdf 2 · 0 0

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