IMPOTANT NOTE1: I have revised my opinion about what it smells like. In the video, I said it was like an indoor pool and I correlated it to the chlorine. However, I think it's more accurate to say the pool locker room or shower. It is musty/moldy, with a background of pool smell. IMPORTANT NOTE2: After posting this video, I got a few messages from people saying that in their experience, cyanide DOES smell like almonds. So, I spent an hour tonight doing some tests, and I think the results are interesting. I did some direct comparisons and the smell of cyanide is distinctly different from the smell of almonds. However, if I EAT the almonds, there is sometimes a faint taste of cyanide. I think this is because sweet almonds still have a very small amount of amygdalin in them, which can release HCN. I don't think it's enough to smell in open air, but in your mouth it can be concentrated enough to be detected at the back of the nose. It's subtle, but it is definitely part of the flavor profile. So, while I still don't think it's accurate to say that it smells like almonds, for some people, it might be similar to the taste. To make that connection though, the person needs to a) be able to smell HCN and b) be particularly aware of that part of the flavor. I can smell the HCN, but I never noticed it in the flavor of almonds, so I didn't make the connection. I was even looking for a similarity and eating almonds at the same time, but never noticed it. It was only when I became very familiar with the smell of HCN that I started noticing it in almonds. What's interesting too, is that now after noticing it, I feel like I've started to associate the smell with almonds. It's no longer just a "chemical" smell and it feels more almondy. However, on the flip side, I feel like almonds taste worse and are more "chemically." But either way, I still don't think that saying it smells like almonds or bitter almonds is accurate or helpful. However, based on the messages I've received, some people are naturally associating cyanide with almonds (sometimes without knowing that this was even a thing and not even knowing they were smelling cyanide). This has piqued my interest and I think it could be fun to get to the bottom of this and to do a trial with a lot more people.
I was wondering if the addition of sulfuric acid to speed the reaction may have contributed to the “chemical/pool” smell. Does dilute sulfuric acid have a smell? Love your channel!
@@1Buttonmasher Nile red is a youtuber known by A TON of people, and he conducts dangerous experiments that somebody with the likes of yiu or me, could never. We’d die. So yes I do believe he did that, because I have more supporting evidence,… also- lol I wasted your time have a nice day
@@NoNameAtAll2 Did you watch the video? He said it just smelled like cyanide and chlorine and maybe a little earthy. So he didn't think it smelled like almonds.
He also said you can't smell salt, but i can. To the point where i know what kind of salt i have under my nose. So...either he's only human (to be read, his failings are such) or not all humans are created equal (i tend to always err on this side, of caution).
I didn't expect it to be that difficult to smell almonds. I just realized that anyone referencing the smell of almonds most likely doesn't know what they are talking about and are actually more likely referring to the taste of almonds given all the effort it takes to actually smell almonds.
@@TristanHill-ju3ng I think the smell is pretty strong. My mom always eats almonds and roasts them sometimes and I hate the smell. I can even smell it when I’m sitting next to her idk what everyone’s on about almonds not having a smell. It’s a very distinct smell too
I want to cry from the start that you need bitter almonds.. but also the aroma is in some Italian biscuits, I think there called Amaretti. And fun fact, there made from apricot cores which also contain cyanide..
"No no, you misunderstand, i was just saving a couple of bucks....., and a few decades of living for my friend slumped over there, but that's besides the point!"
To get the aromatics from almonds, you need to toast them. I would blanch them in boiling water for only a few seconds, remove the skins, then dry them off. (If you try this, using nitrile gloves and simply pinching the larger round end will shoot the nuts out of the skin and leave you with the husk to throw away or use for other purposes) You can then either pan toast in a dry frying pan or lay them evenly in a shallow baking sheet. As the oils are extracted from the heat the aroma is released. The other option is to smell a concentrate via almond extract. Get a good, natural almond extract. I got a large bottle a few years back from Costco for a reasonable price. The smell is very strong and is commonly associated with cherries as well. The extract is made from bitter almonds which is also why they have a very distinct and very different smell from the sweet almonds everyone snacks on. Also note: Fresh almonds have a stronger aroma than the packaged ones that may have been in the package or sitting in a warehouse for who knows how long. If you can find them whole in the shell, it would likely produce a slightly stronger aroma. The packaged ones are likely to smell sterile and if you can smell anything, would likely be that of the packaging or seasoning that they may have flavored the almonds with. When I buy any sort of nut, almonds, walnuts, pecans, that I will use in baking I always toast them first to draw out and intensify the flavor of the nut being used. The difference is quite astounding between toasted and untoasted nuts. Something that was kind of glossed over, unsure if it was on purpose, but it was mentioned that cyanide has different smells at different concentrations. you started out with an extremely low concentration here of only 15ppm. I think in the 30-40ppm it starts forming different aroma compounds. Which I think is why you noticed a very different smell more closely associated with chlorine instead of the bitter almond aroma.
My chemistry teacher always joked: "if you order a kilogram nobody raises an eyebrow and they'll just think you're a chemist, if you order a gram the authorities will burst through your door assuming the worst."
When he said “benzaldehyde” I was so excited because I just watched his cherry soda video and I felt so proud that I knew what that was before he said it😊
7:45 "It kind of just smells like nothing." So almonds are a solid, and like many other solids, it doesn't really smell like anything. To smell almonds, I'll have to turn them into Hydrogen Almonds, so I can smell their gaseous form.
@@janishughesfan56 Yeah, but its not like i was wishing him cancer or anything similar, i get its not your cup of tea, but the dude kept commenting pretty horrible stuff to me
@@elcatrinc1996 To be fair they probably had friends or family go through it so it could be a really touchy subject to them so you have to understand if you make jokes about serious subjects people will get upset I get its only a joke but if you have had family or friends go through it its not funny I support comedy of all forms even dark humour but you gotta expect people to get upset over certain things so you can't really say you didn't see it coming I mean the fact they went out of their way to make you feel shitty over a joke obviously means it personally hurt them so they're just venting frustration out on someone and you just happened to be that someone don't take it personally they're just hurting dude it doesn't make them or you a bad person and I doubt anyone would feel bad for you given the situation so you just deal with it dude Cuz this is just life if you can't take this much there's no hope cuz the world doesn't care how you feel bro just gotta let the past be just that otherwise you're in for a real shitty time along the way However no comedy should be censored because it hurts people I mean it might not be for everyone but jokes are just another form of expression so I agree you should be able to make these jokes you just gotta expect the shit that comes back from it can't expect people to feel bad for you when it does
Chubbyemu fans here I see Me too is a fan Here's a classic show that I am A doctor ate 56 Eggs for breakfast.This is what happen to his channel *Stonks*
me: so what does cyanide smell like? CIA trainer: smells like bitter almonds. me: why do bitter almonds have the scent they do? CIA trainer: they have cyanide in them. me: so you're basically just telling me that cyanide... CIA trainer: ...smells like cyanide. yep. me: *ah yes i see*
As funny as this might be, words can't describe the essence of most experiences. We can assign words to label them like sweet to sugary stuff, but we can't precisely explain them. How does your tongue feel when you sabor something salty? It's like trying to describe a color without naming things that have it
i studied a bit of almond breeding in my degree and you can definitely tell the difference between bitter and sweet on appearance, colour, size, smell … and knowing the cultivar too
Hey, past chemistry student here. What comes to mind with cyanide reactions is flotation of gold ore in cyanides. I don't know the details, but if you keep the cyanide ions in high pH, they're supposed to be very stable and good to help extract gold from minerals. If you could look into that and maybe do some small scale experiment - i think that could be really interesting and helpful in tearing down bad name of cyanide. Just a thought, good luck doing what you do Nile!
we grow a lot of apricot and plum. i collect the kernels and mix them to my morning "birchelmüesli". 1-2 per day. it contains cyanide,so I know the smell very well. the taste is very pleasant dilluted like that.
@@SteichenFamily not being licensed or permitted to experiment on living creatures to start with, having no way to contribute to the scientific community with said "experiments" so no one will benefit from you killing your house pet. There's a big difference dont be dense
Buys Dollar Store almonds and is surprised they smell like nothing... My favorite thing about your videos is that you can be so knowledgeable on a topic and then a complete infant when it comes to more practical knowledge. Cheap food always has less of an aroma because it's sat on a shelf longer or is made from more crude processing
@@Syyth_ well the cyanide is trapped in the almonds, that's why he had to put them in water to get it out. But at that point all he was smelling was cyanide that came off the almonds and not the almonds themselves
This is years later and pertains to your written update. The process of preparing Almonds for sale requires stripping material off usually using bleach to remove any variant of cyanide from the skin/shell. This means in the raw state on the farm they can have a faint off gassing that would be the more "chemical" smelling almond smell. If they ran into it in a smell test it would smell a lot more like almonds as a result. Second notation on that: At strong amounts in the air the smell becomes stronger as well, so if your smelling almonds that don't seem "right" your probably in concentrations that are significantly greater risk than your wisely tested.
I dont watch that often but love the content when I do. Your sense of humor, even in things expressed through the editing is great too👍🏼 btw from my understanding when they say almonds they usually mean more like amaretto if you know what thats like, a bit like cherries tbh and probably more like almonds of the raw variety. Way too late now but just fyi. Ps why don’t you look into the veracity of the effect of amygdalin on cancer cells vs the effect of radiation and chemo, and what are their side effects?
@@cat7371 I know. I'm a biochemistry student lmao The whole point is that the titles for ChubbyEmu can sound absurd. People have turned that into a joke. It's not supposed to be factual and that's the whole point.
Heya! I think you may have saved my gran. Before this video I didn't know there were different types of almonds. Two days after watching it my granny offered me some almonds. I tried them today to find out they were extremely bitter. Remembering this video I phoned granny and told her those are likely deadly. Luckily she doesn't have teeth so she's avoided eating them, but she confessed she got them from a rather wild tree. We had a whole bag from her for the whole family, luckily I was one of the first ones to taste it, as nobody else knew what bitter almonds are. Many thanks from Bulgaria and many thanks from my whole fam! :)
Another Sciency channel dissolved some and drank it (after doing the research and measuring) got a fizzy feeling in his arm just to prove everything could be edible dosage is toxticity. If you are smart and don`t make mistakes it is not dangerous. Especially since he even downgraded from the "this might be dangerous" option to "this is less than half as dangerous".
Sodium cyanide is used to bond chrome to nickel and copper. Don’t know if this helps you for a project but it is super common in old school electroplating
I can't believe you had never tasted bitter almond ! Here in southern France, there are many almond trees in the wild. Everytime I try to eat one, hoping it is a sweet almond, and then immediately regret my decision and spend the next 5 minutes spitting to get rid of the bitter taste.. (i didn't know there was a high concentration of cyanide in them though.. But yeah, no way you'll eat more than one willingly)
So basically cyanide only smells like bitter almonds because bitter almonds contain cyanide. That means saying cyanide smells like almonds is just saying cyanide smells like cyanide.
I work with a plant that's very high in cyanide, I once left a bunch of its leaves on the ground for a week. I came back and picked them up and it reeked of almond. The plant never otherwise smells like anything. It was a laurel.
@Ugly boy Sorry. Next time, I would advise you not to read coments before watching a video. Especially if you decide that video is spoilable in a meaningful way.
Oh its interesting that you noted the taste of cherries, cause i was thinking of how benzaldehyde smells like cherries and then you explained that benzaldehyde is produced when dissolved in water. Cool!
Guess what? There was a new type of sugar found, and it's name is nucleowastose. It is going to be distributed in many candies for a "glowing effect" and it is totally safe, ignoring the fact that it is highly radioactive, emits charged particles, and can kill people, of course.
@discord_pop_cat If almonds had cyanide they would probably have to say it just like how cigarette companies have to warn you about all the sh*t it has
@@hhhhhhhhhhhhhhh-Mikel.Montalat they actually don't, since the cyanide is naturally occurring. The same way they don't label bananas as having potassium, or oranges having citric acid
I'm pretty sure Nile has made some benzaldehyde in the past, which is the main chemical in almonds causing the bitter flavor. FYI. Bitter almonds may yield 4-9 mg of hydrogen cyanide per almond piece, and that's where probably the notion of "smelling like almonds" comes from. By the way, dollar store almonds are not real almonds, they are make of dried poop for a dollar. lol
Ideas for using cyanide: Demonstrate infinite carbon chain length extension (halogenoalkane => nitrile (+1 carbon) => carboxylic acid => alcohol => halogenoalkane, rinse and repeat) - you could use this in a mechanism to produce something maybe? Dissolve gold (just cause why not)
@@francomuscellini1744 order a bunch of those. wait 2-5 years so your movements arent tracked by the fbi or the inteligence agency of your country. get a job in a water treatment station on a big city. work a bit on it like 1 year. start the plan, go putting like 150g of cyanide in the water for some days. watch your kill streak go sky high. get arrested. get assfucked in the shower of the prison. get executed. meet the devil. tell the devil of what you have done. gain respect. profit???
When folks say "smells like almonds" I've always interpreted this in the same way that things smell like "grape" or "watermelon"... "grape flavor" doesn't smell or taste like grapes, it's its own thing. When I think "almond smell" I think smells like Amaretto or like a shot of almond flavor in coffee - definitely distinct from literal almond flavor/smell.
@@xyzzyx7812 No, it wasn't. He needed 3 mg. He could have bought 5g for 48.30 CAD instead of 1kg for 142.00 CAD. This video would have been almost 100 CAD cheaper to make if he only bought 5g of it. Now instead of having 4.997g left over he has 999.997g left over.
Breaking News: Man with no sense of smell poisons entire house with cyanide, after attempting to smell it "to see if it smelled like almonds"! There, I fixed it for you!
IMPOTANT NOTE1: I have revised my opinion about what it smells like. In the video, I said it was like an indoor pool and I correlated it to the chlorine. However, I think it's more accurate to say the pool locker room or shower. It is musty/moldy, with a background of pool smell. IMPORTANT NOTE2: After posting this video, I got a few messages from people saying that in their experience, cyanide DOES smell like almonds. So, I spent an hour tonight doing some tests, and I think the results are interesting. I did some direct comparisons and the smell of cyanide is distinctly different from the smell of almonds. However, if I EAT the almonds, there is sometimes a faint taste of cyanide. I think this is because sweet almonds still have a very small amount of amygdalin in them, which can release HCN. I don't think it's enough to smell in open air, but in your mouth it can be concentrated enough to be detected at the back of the nose. It's subtle, but it is definitely part of the flavor profile. So, while I still don't think it's accurate to say that it smells like almonds, for some people, it might be similar to the taste. To make that connection though, the person needs to a) be able to smell HCN and b) be particularly aware of that part of the flavor. I can smell the HCN, but I never noticed it in the flavor of almonds, so I didn't make the connection. I was even looking for a similarity and eating almonds at the same time, but never noticed it. It was only when I became very familiar with the smell of HCN that I started noticing it in almonds. What's interesting too, is that now after noticing it, I feel like I've started to associate the smell with almonds. It's no longer just a "chemical" smell and it feels more almondy. However, on the flip side, I feel like almonds taste worse and are more "chemically." But either way, I still don't think that saying it smells like almonds or bitter almonds is accurate or helpful. However, based on the messages I've received, some people are naturally associating cyanide with almonds (sometimes without knowing that this was even a thing and not even knowing they were smelling cyanide). This has piqued my interest and I think it could be fun to get to the bottom of this and to do a trial with a lot more people.
Nile: Hydrogen Cyanide is one of the most dangerous forms of Cyanide, it only takes a few breaths to be fatal. Also Nile: The next thing we have to do, is to make Hydrogen Cyanide.
@starshipeleven They used it in some Americans states in gas chambers for executions (they may still). In many cases the prisoner would take well over ten minutes to die even though the concentration was way more than the 300ppm. That’s really more of a guideline for “if you’re inhaling this much you have seriously effed up.” Than actual instant death.
I remember being given apricot pits to eat as a kid. We were told we’d have to eat too many of them to even get sick. Cyanide supposedly smells of “bitter almonds” to those genetically predisposed.
When people say that something "smells like almonds" they're most likely referring to bitter almond extract. Bitter almond extract has a very sharp, boozy smell that's vaguely reminiscent of cherries and other stone fruits.
@@Sibula it's not the Amygdalin that causes the smell, it's what it's hydrolysed product is, Benzaldehyde. For the life of me, I would never describe either cyanide or Benzaldehyde as a boozy smell, no way, it's a sharp, intense, sweet aromatic version of almond only a thousand times more potent, if you ever get to sniff a bottle of pure Benzaldehyde, or HCN (!) or o nitro toluene you know what I am talking about. have some nitrites on hand with the HCN , lol....just in case...one sniff won't kill you tho. There are many things far, far more toxic than HCN
@@psycronizer Yes, but all of them have amygdaline, which the enzyme breaks down into cyanide, benzaldehyde, and sugar. And yes, the smell is mostly from benzaldehyde.
@@Sibula Yeah, that's true. I was actually really surprised when I first learned where almonds come from. Did you know that you can actually use stone fruit pits by themselves as a seasoning? For example you can make a syrup by boiling them with water and sugar that has a very distinct bitter almond taste.
@@psycronizer I'm not really a chemist, so I don't know much about what specific chemicals smell like, but I am a cook so I do know what a lot of ingredients smell like. I haven't used bitter almond extract in a while so that "boozy" part might have just been me thinking about amaretto, a liquor made from stone fruit pits.
Given its chemical composition, I would expect mustard gas to smell like chlorine -- though the level at which you smell it and the level at which it becomes toxic is probably not too far apart.
David Enrique RUclips deleted it, but somehow video which shows how to make cyanide is still available at his channel. And don’t forget about it: “Everything is poison and nothing is poison - the dose makes substance poisonous”. He drank then water solution with really low dose of cyanide so it didn’t harm him
Here's a thought, I know this is from 3 years ago but I'm re-watching things here. It's just too fun! I had an idea for similar things as you asked at the end of this video. I was thinking of edible but poisonous food. I don't know what you can do with this but here's some thoughts: What are some edible foods that have deadly chemicals in them? In large enough amounts or raw, they can hurt you or kill you? Do they smell or do they react somehow? Can a person detect them? And if we're saying toxic, toxic how? Cherry Pits: Like apple seeds, they contain amygdalin, which can release cyanide. Elderberries: Raw berries and seeds contain cyanogenic glycosides; cooked elderberries are safe. Cassava: Contains cyanogenic compounds in its raw form; it must be properly cooked to be safe. Potatoes: Green parts and sprouts contain solanine, a toxic alkaloid. Nutmeg: In large doses, it can cause hallucinations and other serious effects due to myristicin. Thanks, I love your videos. Keep up the good work. You're very talented and creative.
Here's an interesting medical fact for anyone that might be cofused. Not everyone can smell almonds. The specific smell receptors are genetically passed on by non-mandelian inheritence, and just like rolling your tongue or having hair on earlobes, not everyone has the smell receptors to smell almonds. It's one of those weird facts you learn in medical college. It has some importance in forensic medicine. There was a tme when criminals used cyanides for homicide. When mixed with food, it often goes undetected because many people simply can't smell it. This is why he smelled absolutely nothing despite directly smelling so many crushed almonds.
@@друг-з5ъ there are many types of non mendelian inheritence, co-dominance being one example. This isn't co-dominance though. Smell, is a complicated sensations. There are many different genes that code for different receptors, each specific to one chemical. And through permutation and combination of the receptors getting activated, we can differentate one smell from another. In co-dominance we talk about more than one dominant allele, but to 1 specific gene. Here we have many genes, working together, each with different patterns of inheritance. So, smell isn't a simple trait and you can't apply Mendel's law directly. For further interest, read on. Vision, Taste.. these are far less complicated than smell. Say vision. there are just 4 types of receptors. Rods for luminance, and RGB (red,green,blue)types of cones for colour. Similarly taste receptors is only of 5 types. Sweet,sour,bitter,salty and umami. Compare that to smell, more than 400 receptors have already been identified, and many are still unknown.
@MorrowStride most likely explanation is that you have a partial nose blockage. We have an area called nasal valve. It's common to have a blockage their, causing partial loss of smell. Visit you local doctor for evaluation. It can be rectified
In Finland some people use bitter almond extract in a pastry called Runebergintorttu. I had a small bottle of it for years and the fragrance is strong. I like it personally.
In Germany, too - for crhistmas baking. We had a tiny bottle of bitter almond in the family that was probably bought in the 1970s and lived in an old tin full of old spice packages that was only brought out before christmas..
do not worry that much. we make a cookie out of bitter almonds in Turkey and I am still alive after all that cookies that I ate. İf you want to fear from a seed than apple seed is far more containing cyanide and yet you can eat a lot. there will be nothing happen to you
i would say eating in your own lab that you have built and always only you worked in it you could potentaily keep most things in a fumehood and thereby know whats on the benches. But in schools and other lab enviroments eating is kinda bad as ppl put stuff everywhere
An important tip on sniffing technique (for any chemical): take in a breath, hold it, remove stopper, sniff vapour or gas, breath out, replace stopper. That way it doesn’t really get into your lungs where most absorption occurs, and you expel it quickly. You may want to mention this advice in any similar videos.
He just huffs everything he makes. I have NEVER seen him waft a single thing. So he gets to the experiment where he makes THE WORST smell in the entire world and guess what? Can barely smell it. Hmmm, wonder why? Could it be because you've physically killed your smell receptors by huffing everything you've ever made including several carcinogens/pathogens/high acid/high base chemicals and projects? Well gee, I WONDER.
@@Milfappreciater It comes from the fact that non-clergy used to be called laymen. So if the priest was an expert, a layman isnt. Thats why people who arent experts are called lay-people
IMPOTANT NOTE1: I have revised my opinion about what it smells like. In the video, I said it was like an indoor pool and I correlated it to the chlorine. However, I think it's more accurate to say the pool locker room or shower. It is musty/moldy, with a background of pool smell.
IMPORTANT NOTE2: After posting this video, I got a few messages from people saying that in their experience, cyanide DOES smell like almonds. So, I spent an hour tonight doing some tests, and I think the results are interesting. I did some direct comparisons and the smell of cyanide is distinctly different from the smell of almonds. However, if I EAT the almonds, there is sometimes a faint taste of cyanide. I think this is because sweet almonds still have a very small amount of amygdalin in them, which can release HCN. I don't think it's enough to smell in open air, but in your mouth it can be concentrated enough to be detected at the back of the nose. It's subtle, but it is definitely part of the flavor profile. So, while I still don't think it's accurate to say that it smells like almonds, for some people, it might be similar to the taste. To make that connection though, the person needs to a) be able to smell HCN and b) be particularly aware of that part of the flavor.
I can smell the HCN, but I never noticed it in the flavor of almonds, so I didn't make the connection. I was even looking for a similarity and eating almonds at the same time, but never noticed it. It was only when I became very familiar with the smell of HCN that I started noticing it in almonds. What's interesting too, is that now after noticing it, I feel like I've started to associate the smell with almonds. It's no longer just a "chemical" smell and it feels more almondy. However, on the flip side, I feel like almonds taste worse and are more "chemically."
But either way, I still don't think that saying it smells like almonds or bitter almonds is accurate or helpful. However, based on the messages I've received, some people are naturally associating cyanide with almonds (sometimes without knowing that this was even a thing and not even knowing they were smelling cyanide). This has piqued my interest and I think it could be fun to get to the bottom of this and to do a trial with a lot more people.
hi
so who else read the full comment
I was wondering if the addition of sulfuric acid to speed the reaction may have contributed to the “chemical/pool” smell. Does dilute sulfuric acid have a smell? Love your channel!
What videos did you have to take down?
confirmed: almonds have cyanide!!
This should be renamed to: "NileRed tries to discover the smell of almonds"
That’s not click-baity enough.
@@drew899 "What do almonds actually smell like?"
@meekv2 Honorable decision
@MeekV2 Lmao Not anymore sadly
@MeekV2 Lmao It's been 2 hours since you've said that and the likes moved up to 800+
the fact you went straight to sniffing cyanide before questioning whether you'd actually smelt almonds before is such a chemist move.
You actually believe that he did that? Come on...
lol
fuck around and find out
@@giu5357 the scientific method
@@1Buttonmasher Nile red is a youtuber known by A TON of people, and he conducts dangerous experiments that somebody with the likes of yiu or me, could never. We’d die. So yes I do believe he did that, because I have more supporting evidence,… also-
lol I wasted your time have a nice day
in the beginning: lets see if cyanide smells like almonds
in the end: lets see if almonds smell like cyanide
And apparently his conclusion is that they smell the same but neither of them smell like almonds???
@@Sibula almonds don't smell like almonds?
@@NoNameAtAll2 Did you watch the video? He said it just smelled like cyanide and chlorine and maybe a little earthy. So he didn't think it smelled like almonds.
And the conclusion is that almonds doesn't smell like almonds
He also said you can't smell salt, but i can. To the point where i know what kind of salt i have under my nose. So...either he's only human (to be read, his failings are such) or not all humans are created equal (i tend to always err on this side, of caution).
I love how it’s 5 minutes of the cyanide chemistry and 15 minutes of Nigel trying to figure out what almonds smell like
I didn't expect it to be that difficult to smell almonds. I just realized that anyone referencing the smell of almonds most likely doesn't know what they are talking about and are actually more likely referring to the taste of almonds given all the effort it takes to actually smell almonds.
@@TristanHill-ju3ng I think the smell is pretty strong. My mom always eats almonds and roasts them sometimes and I hate the smell. I can even smell it when I’m sitting next to her idk what everyone’s on about almonds not having a smell. It’s a very distinct smell too
@@Calle.Hutch.. I have bought almonds since that comment. You are correct.
I want to cry from the start that you need bitter almonds.. but also the aroma is in some Italian biscuits, I think there called Amaretti. And fun fact, there made from apricot cores which also contain cyanide..
@@Calle.Hutch.. Exactly, I think he just has a horrible sense of smell based on his video "Making the stickiness chemical known to man"
“I swear officer I bought a kilos worth because it was just more economically viable”
69th like on comment
Capitalism 100
Capitalism at its finest
LOL. 420 thumbs
"No no, you misunderstand, i was just saving a couple of bucks....., and a few decades of living for my friend slumped over there, but that's besides the point!"
Professor: DON'T EAT IN THE CHEM LAB!
NileRed: These almonds taste nothing like my cyanide.
those aren't almonds they are a type of plants seed I believe apricot
@@ramclam2524 they might come soon...
"this cyanide tastes FAKE!"
@@Blox117 This cyanide tastes like Egoraptor.
@@ramclam2524 so are the almonds though.
Just different tree species.
“I didn’t want a gram of cyanide, so I bought a kilo” congrats on getting put on a watch list lol
Yea... I'm moving him up a bit for this one...
Well, maybe he just wants to partake in large scale gold mining
Smells like death...
Lets be real, he was probably already on one
@@RETRO-DEV he's Canadian lmao
To get the aromatics from almonds, you need to toast them. I would blanch them in boiling water for only a few seconds, remove the skins, then dry them off. (If you try this, using nitrile gloves and simply pinching the larger round end will shoot the nuts out of the skin and leave you with the husk to throw away or use for other purposes) You can then either pan toast in a dry frying pan or lay them evenly in a shallow baking sheet. As the oils are extracted from the heat the aroma is released. The other option is to smell a concentrate via almond extract. Get a good, natural almond extract. I got a large bottle a few years back from Costco for a reasonable price. The smell is very strong and is commonly associated with cherries as well. The extract is made from bitter almonds which is also why they have a very distinct and very different smell from the sweet almonds everyone snacks on.
Also note: Fresh almonds have a stronger aroma than the packaged ones that may have been in the package or sitting in a warehouse for who knows how long. If you can find them whole in the shell, it would likely produce a slightly stronger aroma. The packaged ones are likely to smell sterile and if you can smell anything, would likely be that of the packaging or seasoning that they may have flavored the almonds with. When I buy any sort of nut, almonds, walnuts, pecans, that I will use in baking I always toast them first to draw out and intensify the flavor of the nut being used. The difference is quite astounding between toasted and untoasted nuts.
Something that was kind of glossed over, unsure if it was on purpose, but it was mentioned that cyanide has different smells at different concentrations. you started out with an extremely low concentration here of only 15ppm. I think in the 30-40ppm it starts forming different aroma compounds. Which I think is why you noticed a very different smell more closely associated with chlorine instead of the bitter almond aroma.
😶🌫️
This comment is disturbing.
Thank you for your comment
How do you know so much
@@zahra0403 Grandmaster of Nuts
I love how he waits until AFTER he's sniffed the potentially deadly gas before pondering if he remembered what almonds smell like. Love this channel.
it's not potentially deadly. It's very deadly, but not harmful enough those concentrations
It's very rational. If he dies from the HCN, he can save the trip to the dollar store.
@@anakinlowground5515 So it's potentially deadly based on the concentration, I don't know what's your point here lol
Hi
@@ritiksingh721 Hi Ritik
Things I learned from this video:
- Almonds smell like nothing
- Cyanide smells like cyanide
also beware of almond flavors things
Almond flavored stuff definitely tastes more like cyanide than almonds
Ah yes, the floor is made of floor
Cyanide smells like cyanide
Almonds smells like cyanide
Liquid cyanide is odorless.
And almonds don’t smell like anything.
Therefore cyanide smells like almonds!
My chemistry teacher always joked: "if you order a kilogram nobody raises an eyebrow and they'll just think you're a chemist, if you order a gram the authorities will burst through your door assuming the worst."
*Noted
What's his name? Walter White?
@@313asm Bro I've been waiting on this Comment.
Note: This does not work for radioactive elements.
Ahhh... nothing like ordering enough cyanide to kill 200,000 people.
When he said “benzaldehyde” I was so excited because I just watched his cherry soda video and I felt so proud that I knew what that was before he said it😊
IKR SAME I WAS SO HAPPY
I know benzaldehyde
It is C⁶H⁵COH
Same hahaha
@@beta_electronC⁶H⁵CHO
Almonds: Smell like almost nothing
Cyanide: Smells like almost nothing
=>Cyanide smells like almonds
i mean to me almonds have a very distinct and pleasant smell never smelled pure cyanide tho
Wow just saw this get 7 more likes
Yeah almonds do have a certain smell just sniff one
*_SNIFFF_* NICE AND GOOD
Good old transitive property
I think there is something wrong with his nose.
Now this is real science, you had a question and you answered it with good ol human testing and trial and error.
What kind of crossover episode is this??
Lol
Nice
Is cyanide really deadly?
wtf are you doing here peter lol
7:45 "It kind of just smells like nothing."
So almonds are a solid, and like many other solids, it doesn't really smell like anything. To smell almonds, I'll have to turn them into Hydrogen Almonds, so I can smell their gaseous form.
H---Almond
Yesss! He should've roasted them geeeeesh
big brain
Giga🧠
His nose is also very burnt due to him doing so much chemical experiment
9:29 I can clearly imagine the smell of almonds. I think his sniffer is broken 😂
exactly. That woody, buttery smell
Conclusion: Cyanide doesn't smell like almond, but almonds smell like cyanide.
We think the same
69th like. Nice
The reason for that is because almonds have a trace amount of cyanide.
@@josshogenesch9511 wait they do
@@stpidstuff did you watch the video?
Next up on NileRed: Does mustard gas smell like mustard?
Obviously joking and stuff but If you ever smelled ammonia, imagine that but stronger
Does choline gas smell like a pool?
Does tear gas smell like tears?
@@orb9760 smells like pain
dude no
“How did he die?”
“He was trying to figure out if cyanide smelled like almonds.”
shout out to that time i made a cancer joke here and an idiot went to my channel to insult me for doing that
"Did he know what almonds smell like to compare?"
"No."
@@elcatrinc1996 look attacking people is stupid but cancer jokes arent funny cause how serious it is
@@janishughesfan56 Yeah, but its not like i was wishing him cancer or anything similar, i get its not your cup of tea, but the dude kept commenting pretty horrible stuff to me
@@elcatrinc1996 To be fair they probably had friends or family go through it so it could be a really touchy subject to them so you have to understand if you make jokes about serious subjects people will get upset I get its only a joke but if you have had family or friends go through it its not funny I support comedy of all forms even dark humour but you gotta expect people to get upset over certain things so you can't really say you didn't see it coming
I mean the fact they went out of their way to make you feel shitty over a joke obviously means it personally hurt them so they're just venting frustration out on someone and you just happened to be that someone don't take it personally they're just hurting dude it doesn't make them or you a bad person and I doubt anyone would feel bad for you given the situation so you just deal with it dude Cuz this is just life if you can't take this much there's no hope cuz the world doesn't care how you feel bro just gotta let the past be just that otherwise you're in for a real shitty time along the way
However no comedy should be censored because it hurts people
I mean it might not be for everyone but jokes are just another form of expression so I agree you should be able to make these jokes you just gotta expect the shit that comes back from it can't expect people to feel bad for you when it does
“It would only take a couple seconds so I figured it would be just fine” famous last words from Nigel Braun. He will be missed R.I.P.
2:50 "Only a few breaths of this could kill a man!"
Nile: "Oh no! Anyway..."
I understood this reference
Took me a minute.. oh f it have a thumbs up..
Insert meme
Very reference. Such me. Much understand. Wow!
@@purplegill10 A show with a Walter? Or something with a Jeff on a rock and scuba diving to rescue a city?
"A Chemist sniffs Cyanide for RUclips. This is what happened to his heart".
-Chubbyemu
Chubbyemu fans here I see
Me too is a fan
Here's a classic show that I am
A doctor ate 56 Eggs for breakfast.This is what happen to his channel *Stonks*
Hahah chubbyemu reference a great youtuber
@@justajobro1266 very very great
@@justajobro1266 very clickbaity tooo
N.R is presenting ☝️ to the emergency room
Nile: dont smell chemicals
Also Nile: "I just had to smell some cyanide"
lol
lol
Even the smartest kid is bound to do dumb things
Nile: I don't wan you to die
Also Nile:
Chemistry Teacher: always smell chemicals by wafting them
Nile: *sticks nose directly into container filled with cyanide gas*
There are so, so many things wrong with this video but in the best ways possible. Lova ya nilered. Keep making absolutly perfect videos
me: so what does cyanide smell like?
CIA trainer: smells like bitter almonds.
me: why do bitter almonds have the scent they do?
CIA trainer: they have cyanide in them.
me: so you're basically just telling me that cyanide...
CIA trainer: ...smells like cyanide. yep.
me: *ah yes i see*
AH YES, THE FLOOR HERE IS MADE OF FLOOR
Yeah, it’s more a case of “bitter almonds smell like cyanide” than “cyanide smells like bitter almonds”
@@TheShizzlemop "this is a birch tree. you can tell it's a birch tree because of the way it is."
As funny as this might be, words can't describe the essence of most experiences. We can assign words to label them like sweet to sugary stuff, but we can't precisely explain them. How does your tongue feel when you sabor something salty? It's like trying to describe a color without naming things that have it
It’s like if an orange is named after the color or the color is named after the fruit.
Nile: chemistry is dangerous and you need to be safe at all times
Also Nile: I think I should smell cyanide for today’s video
Agreed
XD
You seem to be confusing NileBlue with NileRed. They may look exactly the same but
“Let’s smell some cyanide” is a 2020 mood tbh
I would smell cyanide from a room with 300 ppm of it 😍
Sorry, apparently I got into the wrong comment sub section.... *slowly leaving the room backwards*
i also felt like doing this in 2016 almost exactly
@@bosch5303 I read this as "I would smell cyanide in a room with 300 people in it" lol
@@bosch5303 i believe that's called a gas chamber
i studied a bit of almond breeding in my degree and you can definitely tell the difference between bitter and sweet on appearance, colour, size, smell … and knowing the cultivar too
Hey, past chemistry student here.
What comes to mind with cyanide reactions is flotation of gold ore in cyanides. I don't know the details, but if you keep the cyanide ions in high pH, they're supposed to be very stable and good to help extract gold from minerals. If you could look into that and maybe do some small scale experiment - i think that could be really interesting and helpful in tearing down bad name of cyanide. Just a thought, good luck doing what you do Nile!
This could be a fun way to strip the impossibly small gold leads from old electronic scrap, I'd watch that vid!
@@dangoldbach6570 CodysLab has some videos covering that if you'd like to see some examples.
You can also extract silver! Mac Arthur's Cyanide process.
Just in case you are unaware, Cody from Cody's Lab had done quite a bit of that. If you are interested, it might be worth a look.
nile: *porceeds to kill himself*
"My skin cancer fell off" LMAOOO
wtf
I CANT BREATHE
Im guessing their left toe fell off too
@@Tactix_se Neither can the reviewer
@@frandurrieu6477 im fuckin dead
why is nobody talking bout the 5 star review "My skin cancer fell off"
fake reviews probably or troll reviews
@@Lolkork Yes, I've seen that one.
the cancer became it's own organism and went to seek greater things
I mean if his skin fell off, probably the skin cancer fell off too
we grow a lot of apricot and plum. i collect the kernels and mix them to my morning "birchelmüesli". 1-2 per day.
it contains cyanide,so I know the smell very well. the taste is very pleasant dilluted like that.
"My skin cancer fell off"
Yea I can see why that's pretty scary
Can't have skin cancer without skin!
I dont think its meant to fall off
"Some of the reviews were genuinely scary"
*"my skin cancer fell off"*
What about that person who certainly killed their dog?
@geo weo: Why? How is using an experimental treatment on a dog any worse than trying it on a mouse?
@@SteichenFamily not being licensed or permitted to experiment on living creatures to start with, having no way to contribute to the scientific community with said "experiments" so no one will benefit from you killing your house pet. There's a big difference dont be dense
@@Jonathan-gj1ie I know that their point was to help their dog, but yeah that’s still not really smart to do, I wouldn’t give that to my dog
@@SteichenFamily there's a big difference between a controlled test in a lab and just... poisoning your dog
Buys Dollar Store almonds and is surprised they smell like nothing...
My favorite thing about your videos is that you can be so knowledgeable on a topic and then a complete infant when it comes to more practical knowledge. Cheap food always has less of an aroma because it's sat on a shelf longer or is made from more crude processing
processing? these are just nuts my son
Are we going to ignore how about a fourth of this experiment was figuring out what almonds smelled like
its in the title, what did you expect
@@rossco7214 No it's probably because he smelled it after, so he can't give a good example for any of the smell before this.
its important research
Lacked a 5th one including lemons.
It's a control variable, it wouldn't be close to an experiment without it.
some dude smelling cyanide: "yup, this smells like almonds"
Nile, smelling bitter almonds: "honestly it just smells like cyanide"
To be fair by that point he literally was just smelling the cyanide coming off the almonds from it reacting with water, not the almonds themselves
@@sneersh9107 what if bitter almonds just smell like cyanide but we can’t tell because they are trapped inside due to almonds being solid
@@Syyth_ well the cyanide is trapped in the almonds, that's why he had to put them in water to get it out. But at that point all he was smelling was cyanide that came off the almonds and not the almonds themselves
lmaooo
Nile: Smells almond milk.
Nile: "This smells like almond milk!"
Nothing like almonds at all!
Me: reads the comment
My head: hmm yes the floor hear is made of floor
Don't ask about the name I was a kid when I made it
@@uian6827 you can change your name if you want.
@@uian6827 You joined April of this year. You're still a kid. xD
This is years later and pertains to your written update. The process of preparing Almonds for sale requires stripping material off usually using bleach to remove any variant of cyanide from the skin/shell. This means in the raw state on the farm they can have a faint off gassing that would be the more "chemical" smelling almond smell. If they ran into it in a smell test it would smell a lot more like almonds as a result.
Second notation on that: At strong amounts in the air the smell becomes stronger as well, so if your smelling almonds that don't seem "right" your probably in concentrations that are significantly greater risk than your wisely tested.
"Few circumstances where you want to mix these two chemicals"
Mixes them because he's bored of waiting.
Desperate times call for desperate measures.
He said extremely dilute though.
HUEHEHuheheuhehue youtube money goes Brrrrr. ecology and proper waste disposal is boring huehehe
Nile: *smells almonds*
Nile: "It smells like nothing."
Me: *Does cyanide affect your sense of smell?*
I always wondered about that lol I was exposed once to a not unsubstantial amount and I swear it started to get a smell
I mean Hydrogen sulfide actually does damage your sense of smell by toxicity, so cyanide might do the same
cyanide is supposed to TASTE like almonds.
of course, thats quite hard to prove
@@LL-tr5et Hey guys, this cyanide tastes like al
I can just imagine the conversations like
"-Hey bro, want to smell some cyanide?
- Wtf bro, no!
- C'mon! Its for science!"
Anything for science
We do what we must, because, we can.
Call it coke
😂
I dont watch that often but love the content when I do. Your sense of humor, even in things expressed through the editing is great too👍🏼 btw from my understanding when they say almonds they usually mean more like amaretto if you know what thats like, a bit like cherries tbh and probably more like almonds of the raw variety. Way too late now but just fyi.
Ps why don’t you look into the veracity of the effect of amygdalin on cancer cells vs the effect of radiation and chemo, and what are their side effects?
Next up on ChubbyEmu:
"A man tried to smell cynide. This is what happened to his brain".
funny thing my next video is a video from chubbyemu
Underrated comment
Oh, man...!
lmao
@@cat7371
I know. I'm a biochemistry student lmao
The whole point is that the titles for ChubbyEmu can sound absurd.
People have turned that into a joke.
It's not supposed to be factual and that's the whole point.
This channel has taught me that NileRed is immortal
yes
Cody's lab did it too, though I don't know if the video is still around. He drinks a cyanide solution in that video, in case you're curious.
According to the current data Nile Red will live forever and is immune to all damage
He is the human thanos
INEVITABLE
it’s like he’s... not human...
Alternative title:
Guy smelling almonds for 15 minutes straight.
and they smell like nothing!
Roasting them brings out the smell. I've been to serval renaissance festivals, you can smell roasted almonds from hundreds of feet away.
But does it taste like almonds?
Heya! I think you may have saved my gran. Before this video I didn't know there were different types of almonds. Two days after watching it my granny offered me some almonds. I tried them today to find out they were extremely bitter. Remembering this video I phoned granny and told her those are likely deadly. Luckily she doesn't have teeth so she's avoided eating them, but she confessed she got them from a rather wild tree. We had a whole bag from her for the whole family, luckily I was one of the first ones to taste it, as nobody else knew what bitter almonds are.
Many thanks from Bulgaria and many thanks from my whole fam! :)
P.S. I can still taste the bitterness even hours after eating 2 of those almonds, and my stomach feels weird. Be careful folks.
Still alive?
Rip
F
Rest in peace fellow, may you live forever in our hearts
“None of my friends want to smell cyanide with me :(“
Aw that’s sad.
Thats a step up from glue sniffing...
This whole video is just “This is really dangerous, but _theoretically speaking_ this shouldn’t kill me.”
That’s his whole channel
Well, between an idiot and a scientist the difference can be as slim as just some simple math.
@@Arelias95 a scientist is just a really determined idiot, according to my old chem teacher 😂
@@cecipasttenseseesaw Well, I guess that makes sense xD
Another Sciency channel dissolved some and drank it (after doing the research and measuring) got a fizzy feeling in his arm just to prove everything could be edible dosage is toxticity. If you are smart and don`t make mistakes it is not dangerous. Especially since he even downgraded from the "this might be dangerous" option to "this is less than half as dangerous".
Sodium cyanide is used to bond chrome to nickel and copper. Don’t know if this helps you for a project but it is super common in old school electroplating
I can't believe you had never tasted bitter almond ! Here in southern France, there are many almond trees in the wild. Everytime I try to eat one, hoping it is a sweet almond, and then immediately regret my decision and spend the next 5 minutes spitting to get rid of the bitter taste.. (i didn't know there was a high concentration of cyanide in them though.. But yeah, no way you'll eat more than one willingly)
I'm French and I didn't even know these EXISTED.
@@Shalvus autour de Perpignan dans le sud ouest. Dans les collines surtout il y en a pas mal
"I can't believe you never tasted this god awful nut that grows only in specific regions and no one likes. "
That really makes you wonder?
"It doesn't smell like anything" "It doesn't taste like anything"
*suspiciously looks at coronavirus symptoms list*
this is a copied comment from Luke Andris
And... Busted!!!
@¡ᒷᔑꖌ𒈙𒐫꧍𒈙𒐫¡ᒷᔑꖌ𒈙꧄𒈙I𒈙𒈙ꧥ𒈙L𒈙ᔑ𒈙𒈙ꦼ come on, we're going find who asked.
Beat me to the comment, aha
@¡ᒷᔑꖌ𒈙𒐫꧍𒈙𒐫¡ᒷᔑꖌ𒈙꧄𒈙I𒈙𒈙ꧥ𒈙L𒈙ᔑ𒈙𒈙ꦼ did i fucking ask for a copied comment?
Buys kilogram of cyanide:
*Uses a single crystal*
Yeah what the hell, he didn’t ingest the entire kilogram.....such a waste😒😒
@@VG-or1nu That's cody's specialty
So basically cyanide only smells like bitter almonds because bitter almonds contain cyanide. That means saying cyanide smells like almonds is just saying cyanide smells like cyanide.
Alternative title: How I found out that cyanide smells like cyanide.
Hat about: I recreated the nazi killing gas to see what it smells like...??!! (all caps)
7:30
"I picked up some gourmet almonds"
"From the dollar store"
Nilered, lover of fine cuisine
gourmet aka garbage
@@THESLlCK I mean nuts are pretty damn good for you
@@watchableraven3517 sushi is pretty damn good for you, you gonna eat sashimi from a nebraska gas station?
@@THESLlCK I never saw anyone get triggered by food, damn.
@@THESLlCK This is the dumbest comparison I’ve ever seen. Congratulations
It's ok, he won't die. He's the main protagonist of the show.
Lev Kryvenko yeah
Ah, plot armor is TIGHT!
IS THAT AN ANIME REFERENCE..... BUT.... WHAT IF THIS WAS JOOJOOOOO
He will not die becaus he is the main caracter
What you're talking about is "plot armour". And it really depends on who the "author" is. Plenty of authors kill off main characters.
I work with a plant that's very high in cyanide, I once left a bunch of its leaves on the ground for a week. I came back and picked them up and it reeked of almond. The plant never otherwise smells like anything. It was a laurel.
Nile: "I want to smell cyanide."
Raycon: "I'll help you buy some."
😆😆😆😆
LOL *no*
@@ruthsalgado6775 no
I'm so mad.. I thought the same damn thing.
oh god
"My skin cancer fell off" - average usefulness and or accuracy of amazon reviews lol.
Dang when I ate them all of my skin fell off and it looked like I crawled straight out of Trinoble
@@videoscanbegames3487 DID YOU REALLY JUST SAY TRINOBLE
@@UglyPotato34 LMFAOOOO
You don’t no about when three of the popes nobles skinned a bunch of people alive in name of god
So what we found out is:
1. Cyanide doesn't smell like almonds
2. Almonds doesn't smell like almonds
;)
@Ugly boy Sorry. Next time, I would advise you not to read coments before watching a video. Especially if you decide that video is spoilable in a meaningful way.
Ugly boy You can read the fun part after the video
*don't
Wow lol, ur comment is nearly exactly the same as mine
u forgot
3. Cyanide smells like cyanide!
Oh its interesting that you noted the taste of cherries, cause i was thinking of how benzaldehyde smells like cherries and then you explained that benzaldehyde is produced when dissolved in water. Cool!
"When things are toxic, they usually smell bad, which is a sign to get away from it."
*coughs in carbon monoxide*
Hence "usually".
Damn twitter users must smell terrible then 😂
@@justamicrowave2572 why does it seem ironic to you? It's a just a job like any other
Exception confirms the rule
Carbon monoxide has almost no smell.. and can kill you in minutes.
Next video: “I heard nuclear waste smells like candy”
@@frank8627-v8k Well yea because uranium decays into lead :/
Guess what? There was a new type of sugar found, and it's name is nucleowastose. It is going to be distributed in many candies for a "glowing effect" and it is totally safe, ignoring the fact that it is highly radioactive, emits charged particles, and can kill people, of course.
Dude this comment is Disaster.... 😂😂😂😂
@@sujathasubramanian7853 so you're saying
I can turn into a real life glowstick?
Next video: "I heard cyanide tasted like almonds. (Taste test)
>eats almonds with a high cyanide content
>”have these been washed?”
His heart’s in the right place
in a fast pace*
@@jtrudeau1506 in a no pace*
@@madkirk7431 *in the earth, 6 feet under
@discord_pop_cat If almonds had cyanide they would probably have to say it just like how cigarette companies have to warn you about all the sh*t it has
@@hhhhhhhhhhhhhhh-Mikel.Montalat they actually don't, since the cyanide is naturally occurring. The same way they don't label bananas as having potassium, or oranges having citric acid
Next Nile red vid: does uranium actually taste like candy?
"I didn't just have a bunch of cyanide just lying around..."
Me: That's...that's actually surprising.
as if some normal person would walk up to your door and ask for some cyanide.. yea sure i have some..how much you need?
well, he bought a kilo, so now he does. :D
😂😂😂😂😂😂 true I felt the same too but he it so felt that's ok
I'm pretty sure Nile has made some benzaldehyde in the past, which is the main chemical in almonds causing the bitter flavor.
FYI. Bitter almonds may yield 4-9 mg of hydrogen cyanide per almond piece, and that's where probably the notion of "smelling like almonds" comes from. By the way, dollar store almonds are not real almonds, they are make of dried poop for a dollar. lol
@@chezeus1672 Technically, he bought a kilogram. A kilo of cyanide would be one thousand cyanide molecules ;)
Ideas for using cyanide:
Demonstrate infinite carbon chain length extension (halogenoalkane => nitrile (+1 carbon) => carboxylic acid => alcohol => halogenoalkane, rinse and repeat) - you could use this in a mechanism to produce something maybe?
Dissolve gold (just cause why not)
Or, just hear me out... Kill people. Maybe a chemist vigilante.
He already dissolved gold, kind of.
he could try to extract gold out of a sample of rocks and dirt like mining does
@@jannikhtc88 yeah, he did it with computer parts.
@@francomuscellini1744 order a bunch of those. wait 2-5 years so your movements arent tracked by the fbi or the inteligence agency of your country. get a job in a water treatment station on a big city. work a bit on it like 1 year. start the plan, go putting like 150g of cyanide in the water for some days. watch your kill streak go sky high. get arrested. get assfucked in the shower of the prison. get executed. meet the devil. tell the devil of what you have done. gain respect. profit???
When folks say "smells like almonds" I've always interpreted this in the same way that things smell like "grape" or "watermelon"... "grape flavor" doesn't smell or taste like grapes, it's its own thing. When I think "almond smell" I think smells like Amaretto or like a shot of almond flavor in coffee - definitely distinct from literal almond flavor/smell.
tf is a tarkov player doing watching nile red smell cyanide XD
Maybe we don’t know something and Veritas could be Veritasium
It's like saying metal smells like metal, but it really doesn't, you can't smell metal.
Grape flavor just tastes purple lol
It's about almond oil
8:43 almond milk, with pulp
A chemists version of Russian roulette: Just mix the almonds
nice
lmao
OH NOO
☠️☠️😂😂
Bean boozler for the purists
“How NileRed assassinated the Ukrainian president, dissolved and disposed of his body and turned it into edible gummies”
ASTANAVITES
nilered scary
7:54 - 8:10 with only sound and no context
I don't get it, and I'm ukrainian.. are you talking about the poisoning of Yuschenko? What's that got to do with crushed almonds
@@anonymousbloke1 I’m Ukrainian and I don’t get the reference either. Yuschenko was poisoned with dioxin. Шо він меле?
Nile:Wears a t shirt for adding a catalyst to dilute cyanide
Also nile: Wears protective gear for cutting a pack of almonds
from the video where you made the stinky substance, I think your sniffer is not very sensitive. Keep up the great videos!
"A few grams was way overpiced"
What i think hes gonna say:
"So i decided to make it myself using stuff i bought from the hardware store"
Ha... that's exactly what I was thinking too... imagine just having a kilo of NaCN lying around😳
I thought that too. Maybe he could extract it from apple seeds or even almonds next time.
@@neilgerace355 or even synthesis it himself. I assume you can... lol.. to Wiki!
Women: "Why do we live longer than men?"
NileRed: [Smells cyanide]
@[CT CCTCGGCGGG] Gotta do what you gotta do for science
@[CT CCTCGGCGGG] I think smelling cyanide should be scary for everyone, that's like common sense
It's scary for sure but cyanide doesn't actually poison you if you don't die from it.
"But just to be safe" he took SOOO many safety procotions
@@sara4024 Woman.
My dude bought a kilo, just to use a granule. Respect.
it was more economically viable
Strange how his neighbors are all dead
@@xyzzyx7812 No, it wasn't. He needed 3 mg. He could have bought 5g for 48.30 CAD instead of 1kg for 142.00 CAD. This video would have been almost 100 CAD cheaper to make if he only bought 5g of it. Now instead of having 4.997g left over he has 999.997g left over.
@@gyroninjamodder By economically viable, he means the price per gram
@@gyroninjamodder It would be 10 CAD per gram versus 0.15 CAD per gram
You should make a video explaining the chemistry of extracting gold from ore with the use of sodium cyanide.
"Cyanide can easily kill you"
Nile Red: **Snort** that's some good shit.
Lololol
Lololol
Lololol
Lololol
Lololol
How to be a chemist:
Lesson 1: your vocabulary should be primarily made of:
- distilled water
- cranked up the heat
Free distilled water
Strong stirring 😁
_to do this, it was pretty simple_
@@StardropSmoothie You can always do "freelance chemistry"
Cursed account name
"My skin cancer fell off"
Yeesh...
You can't get cancer if you're dead
@Alex You can’t get deceased if you’re dead.
He forgot to mention his brain fell out a few days earlier...
cant be alive if you dont exist
@Alex Bruh, don’t break the chain you started.
I'm wishing on being a chemical engineer with some backup knowledge from you. Thanks for being such a teacher!
Amazingly, the scissor flip at 7:38 was probably the most dangerous thing he did in this video.
"Scissor me!"
(iykyk)
@@ava_niche YES!!
Totally worth it though, nice cut (In a film sense, not finger sense).
11:20 (bookmark)
Breaking news, man poisons entire house with cyanide attempting to, "smell it to see if it smelled like almonds."
Breaking News: Man with no sense of smell poisons entire house with cyanide, after attempting to smell it "to see if it smelled like almonds"!
There, I fixed it for you!
IMPOTANT NOTE1: I have revised my opinion about what it smells like. In the video, I said it was like an indoor pool and I correlated it to the chlorine. However, I think it's more accurate to say the pool locker room or shower. It is musty/moldy, with a background of pool smell.
IMPORTANT NOTE2: After posting this video, I got a few messages from people saying that in their experience, cyanide DOES smell like almonds. So, I spent an hour tonight doing some tests, and I think the results are interesting. I did some direct comparisons and the smell of cyanide is distinctly different from the smell of almonds. However, if I EAT the almonds, there is sometimes a faint taste of cyanide. I think this is because sweet almonds still have a very small amount of amygdalin in them, which can release HCN. I don't think it's enough to smell in open air, but in your mouth it can be concentrated enough to be detected at the back of the nose. It's subtle, but it is definitely part of the flavor profile. So, while I still don't think it's accurate to say that it smells like almonds, for some people, it might be similar to the taste. To make that connection though, the person needs to a) be able to smell HCN and b) be particularly aware of that part of the flavor.
I can smell the HCN, but I never noticed it in the flavor of almonds, so I didn't make the connection. I was even looking for a similarity and eating almonds at the same time, but never noticed it. It was only when I became very familiar with the smell of HCN that I started noticing it in almonds. What's interesting too, is that now after noticing it, I feel like I've started to associate the smell with almonds. It's no longer just a "chemical" smell and it feels more almondy. However, on the flip side, I feel like almonds taste worse and are more "chemically."
But either way, I still don't think that saying it smells like almonds or bitter almonds is accurate or helpful. However, based on the messages I've received, some people are naturally associating cyanide with almonds (sometimes without knowing that this was even a thing and not even knowing they were smelling cyanide). This has piqued my interest and I think it could be fun to get to the bottom of this and to do a trial with a lot more people.
@@connieprude3386 what
@@tavswirl5002 it was the top pinned comment that nileRed said. connie copied the entire comment (somehow) and said it as a reply.
@@thunderbuttocks28 I know I just need to know why
Nile: Hydrogen Cyanide is one of the most dangerous forms of Cyanide, it only takes a few breaths to be fatal.
Also Nile: The next thing we have to do, is to make Hydrogen Cyanide.
And even at 300ppm it doesn’t kill immediately.
@starshipeleven They used it in some Americans states in gas chambers for executions (they may still). In many cases the prisoner would take well over ten minutes to die even though the concentration was way more than the 300ppm.
That’s really more of a guideline for “if you’re inhaling this much you have seriously effed up.” Than actual instant death.
I remember being given apricot pits to eat as a kid. We were told we’d have to eat too many of them to even get sick. Cyanide supposedly smells of “bitter almonds” to those genetically predisposed.
When people say that something "smells like almonds" they're most likely referring to bitter almond extract. Bitter almond extract has a very sharp, boozy smell that's vaguely reminiscent of cherries and other stone fruits.
Yes, because all stone fruits (and almonds) are closely related and have mostly the same stuff, including amygdalin, in their seeds.
@@Sibula it's not the Amygdalin that causes the smell, it's what it's hydrolysed product is, Benzaldehyde. For the life of me, I would never describe either cyanide or Benzaldehyde as a boozy smell, no way, it's a sharp, intense, sweet aromatic version of almond only a thousand times more potent, if you ever get to sniff a bottle of pure Benzaldehyde, or HCN (!) or o nitro toluene you know what I am talking about. have some nitrites on hand with the HCN , lol....just in case...one sniff won't kill you tho. There are many things far, far more toxic than HCN
@@psycronizer Yes, but all of them have amygdaline, which the enzyme breaks down into cyanide, benzaldehyde, and sugar. And yes, the smell is mostly from benzaldehyde.
@@Sibula Yeah, that's true. I was actually really surprised when I first learned where almonds come from. Did you know that you can actually use stone fruit pits by themselves as a seasoning? For example you can make a syrup by boiling them with water and sugar that has a very distinct bitter almond taste.
@@psycronizer I'm not really a chemist, so I don't know much about what specific chemicals smell like, but I am a cook so I do know what a lot of ingredients smell like. I haven't used bitter almond extract in a while so that "boozy" part might have just been me thinking about amaretto, a liquor made from stone fruit pits.
“Does mustard gas actually smells like mustard”
No it just has a yellow tint similar to the color of mustard
Who the hell are you???
Given its chemical composition, I would expect mustard gas to smell like chlorine -- though the level at which you smell it and the level at which it becomes toxic is probably not too far apart.
@@mr.cleaned582 I am you, but better
"Does Sarin smell like a Karen?"
NileRed: WARNING! Cyanide can easily KILL YOU!
Cody: Hold my mercury, ThunderStick™ and nitroglycerine as I chug this glass of cyanide!
Cody already has a video where he drinks cyanide. Or at least he did, I don't know if he deleted it at some point.
Cody: **Snorting Uranium ore** Fuck yeah let's drink mercury
David Enrique RUclips deleted it, but somehow video which shows how to make cyanide is still available at his channel. And don’t forget about it: “Everything is poison and nothing is poison - the dose makes substance poisonous”. He drank then water solution with really low dose of cyanide so it didn’t harm him
They're both Chads if you ask me.
@@davidonfim2381 last time I checked was at a comment on one of his videos, it's unlisted not deleted
Here's a thought, I know this is from 3 years ago but I'm re-watching things here. It's just too fun! I had an idea for similar things as you asked at the end of this video.
I was thinking of edible but poisonous food. I don't know what you can do with this but here's some thoughts:
What are some edible foods that have deadly chemicals in them? In large enough amounts or raw, they can hurt you or kill you? Do they smell or do they react somehow? Can a person detect them? And if we're saying toxic, toxic how?
Cherry Pits: Like apple seeds, they contain amygdalin, which can release cyanide.
Elderberries: Raw berries and seeds contain cyanogenic glycosides; cooked elderberries are safe.
Cassava: Contains cyanogenic compounds in its raw form; it must be properly cooked to be safe.
Potatoes: Green parts and sprouts contain solanine, a toxic alkaloid.
Nutmeg: In large doses, it can cause hallucinations and other serious effects due to myristicin.
Thanks, I love your videos. Keep up the good work. You're very talented and creative.
Next on NileRed: Does mustard gas actually smell like mustard?
Smells like garlic that is a bit rancid.
@@worddunlap
Thanks I was curious
This should be the top comment.
Probably smells like blood and burning skin, at least that is what you would be smelling.
@@worddunlap I think he should double check 😆
"Does cyanide smell like almonds?"
20 mins later
"Idk not really."
Here's an interesting medical fact for anyone that might be cofused. Not everyone can smell almonds. The specific smell receptors are genetically passed on by non-mandelian inheritence, and just like rolling your tongue or having hair on earlobes, not everyone has the smell receptors to smell almonds. It's one of those weird facts you learn in medical college.
It has some importance in forensic medicine. There was a tme when criminals used cyanides for homicide. When mixed with food, it often goes undetected because many people simply can't smell it.
This is why he smelled absolutely nothing despite directly smelling so many crushed almonds.
by non-mendelian, do you mean the genotype for smelling almonds has more than 1 dominant allele? Like blood groups that have codominant alleles?
@@друг-з5ъ there are many types of non mendelian inheritence, co-dominance being one example. This isn't co-dominance though. Smell, is a complicated sensations. There are many different genes that code for different receptors, each specific to one chemical. And through permutation and combination of the receptors getting activated, we can differentate one smell from another.
In co-dominance we talk about more than one dominant allele, but to 1 specific gene.
Here we have many genes, working together, each with different patterns of inheritance. So, smell isn't a simple trait and you can't apply Mendel's law directly.
For further interest, read on.
Vision, Taste.. these are far less complicated than smell.
Say vision. there are just 4 types of receptors. Rods for luminance, and RGB (red,green,blue)types of cones for colour.
Similarly taste receptors is only of 5 types.
Sweet,sour,bitter,salty and umami.
Compare that to smell, more than 400 receptors have already been identified, and many are still unknown.
@MorrowStride most likely explanation is that you have a partial nose blockage. We have an area called nasal valve. It's common to have a blockage their, causing partial loss of smell. Visit you local doctor for evaluation. It can be rectified
Was just about to post this myself, this is definitely true
You think the mandaloria, has mandelian receptor or whatever you said? Bada bing wa waa
In Finland some people use bitter almond extract in a pastry called Runebergintorttu. I had a small bottle of it for years and the fragrance is strong. I like it personally.
In Germany, too - for crhistmas baking. We had a tiny bottle of bitter almond in the family that was probably bought in the 1970s and lived in an old tin full of old spice packages that was only brought out before christmas..
it's quite scary how easily that kilo would turn into a chemical weapon
do not worry that much. we make a cookie out of bitter almonds in Turkey and I am still alive after all that cookies that I ate. İf you want to fear from a seed than apple seed is far more containing cyanide and yet you can eat a lot. there will be nothing happen to you
@@bakidilek i think they were talking about the kilo of sodium cyanide he bought lol
@@cranberryjuice960 it is very scary scienario
I doubt there is many lab houses that don't keep lists anymore. For some reason I bet you could find one in Canada.
@@tiktokshorts7356 Cody :)
"Don't smell the chemicals, dont eat in the lab"
hmmmm
You *waft* the chemicals
@@thejusmar yes, you must WAFT it
Aspartame was discovered when James Schlatter accidentally ate some bread with a bit of it on his hand still and it tasted sweet.
i would say eating in your own lab that you have built and always only you worked in it you could potentaily keep most things in a fumehood and thereby know whats on the benches. But in schools and other lab enviroments eating is kinda bad as ppl put stuff everywhere
@@simedinson984 You shouldn't eat in the lab under any circumstance. Mistakes can happen easily.
An important tip on sniffing technique (for any chemical): take in a breath, hold it, remove stopper, sniff vapour or gas, breath out, replace stopper. That way it doesn’t really get into your lungs where most absorption occurs, and you expel it quickly. You may want to mention this advice in any similar videos.
As a layperson I'd be afraid of sniffing any random chemicals, but especially cyanide. I'll leave that to the chemists
He just huffs everything he makes. I have NEVER seen him waft a single thing.
So he gets to the experiment where he makes THE WORST smell in the entire world and guess what? Can barely smell it. Hmmm, wonder why? Could it be because you've physically killed your smell receptors by huffing everything you've ever made including several carcinogens/pathogens/high acid/high base chemicals and projects? Well gee, I WONDER.
@@Anon_E_Muss what's a layperson?
@@Milfappreciater a non professional in that field
@@Milfappreciater It comes from the fact that non-clergy used to be called laymen. So if the priest was an expert, a layman isnt. Thats why people who arent experts are called lay-people
Everytime a video of yours shows up on my phone i always watch them