See the link below.
Yes, but not very many. For the number of carbs in celery, see the page link, further down this page, listed under Related Questions.
Yes, but extremely little.
There is no protein in celery.
No it containss fiber
Yes
In theory, I suppose so. But that's not too realistic.
As long as water, air, sunlight, a suitable temperature and nutrients are available, a celery will continue to grow naturally even when not observed.
Yes. Celery will provide some nutrition your body needs like fiber, water, and micronutrients that most plant foods provide. However, you still need to obtain many other nutrients like protein, whole grains, and healthy fats to stay nourished.
Apples and caramel, applesauce, crackers, granola, celery and ranch, cheerios, any cereal really, grapes, strawberries, any kind of fruit. The baby puffs that melt in your mouth have many nutrients.
Celery
No, it doesn't contain any saturated fat.
Most vegetables have a high content of nutrients that benefit the health of a person. Vegetables do not provide proteins and fats. If a person is on a vegan diet the proteins and fats can be found in nuts to substitute meats.
Celery is a noun. A sentence with celery in it is: The celery was mushy. A noun is a person place or thing. Celery is a thing which makes it a noun.
no
Celery is a plant. It gets its nutrients from the sun, soil and water. Ataully that is soo wrong. Heres my answer. So i walks to work one night and the full moon is out, then sudenly i get mugged by some dancing celery. the celery took my phone and my money, then went to tesco and bought a packet of celery and eats it. I think that celery was a cannible. NOOOO this is my anser i am celery and i ate my brother and your mother then i came into your room (if your a girl) and slid myself up and down until you skreamed more more more and i never came out you left me in there then i ran away and ate somemore cellery and know i look like an old prun
can you substitute celery salt for celery powder? If so what is the ratio.
Lots of pictures of celery via the Related Link.