Will mixing red and blue food couloring work or is there a better method?
Asked
Active
Viewed 3,773 times
4
-
related : [Would the same mixing principles that apply to paint work for Food Coloring variations?](http://cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/7151/would-the-same-mixing-principles-that-apply-to-paint-work-for-food-coloring-varia) – Joe Oct 15 '10 at 09:33
-
1Yes. Pigment is a matter of subtractive mixing, while light is additive. In basic terms, all pigments operate on the same basic principles when mixing. Light behaves differently but isn't really germane here. – Oct 15 '10 at 10:16
3 Answers
3
Yes. Buy purple food colouring. any baking supply store will have it, and there are plenty of suppliers online. Powdered colour is much more intense than liquid.
-
Can't get purple food coloring here in new zealand for some weird reason. Been unable to get it for a couple of years I was told. So weird. I found an old one and used that. – Oct 16 '10 at 21:30
3
You might be able to get that color with a blueberry juice or maybe beets, but purple food coloring would be easiest.

Brendan Long
- 2,837
- 3
- 27
- 26
-
3Beet juice is distinctly red. Blueberries are a very good idea though, and hey, more flavour! Purple carrots might also work, but I have never juiced them. – Oct 15 '10 at 05:38
3
I think that for casual home use, mixing your own blue and red is a perfectly fine idea. I've done it for making playdough and it is just fine. You could experiment with a few drops in water to determine the blue-to-red ratio, but unless you need a really specific color (Minnesota Vikings Purple or somesuch), just using equal amounts is fine.

Michael Natkin
- 30,230
- 16
- 86
- 172