So I tried that classic baking soda and vinegar volcano with my kid last weekend, and honestly, our eruption was pretty sad. It got me wondering if my white vinegar has just been sitting in the pantry too long and lost its potency. How can you actually tell if the stuff has gone weak?
I hear you. The volcano you hoped for is not guaranteed every time and that empty eruption can still be a memory to smile about. My kid and I had a similar miss once and we learned to roll with it. Vinegar is surprisingly stubborn and still useful.
White distilled vinegar rarely goes bad in a pantry bottle. It stays potent for a long time because the acidity stays near five percent. The only thing that can change is how it mixes with air or how you measure it. If the fizz is weak you can try a fresh bottle and more baking soda to test strength.
Maybe the issue is not the vinegar at all. It could be the setup or the amount of baking soda or the container size. I would not rush to blame the vinegar without testing the reaction first.
Think of it as a tiny chemistry moment about balance and timing not a verdict on your pantry stock. You might be surprised how the same ingredients act differently in small jars vs a big bowl.
We just dumped in stuff and hoped for fireworks and sometimes it works sometimes it hops along with a shy hiss. The kid thought it was funny either way.
Do you keep the bottle sealed after opening and how long has it sat in your pantry? If yes you may have exposed it to air.
Maybe the craft of the moment matters more than the science and you can rewrite the scene with a splashy foam or bright food dye to set expectations for a kid who loves visuals