By Daniel Miessler on May 28th, 2006: Tagged as General
Ice in milk.
Yes, some people put ice in milk. So you get watery milk, with ice floating in it. Not thick, substantive, milk, and not clean, refreshing water. It’s something in between, and it’s no doubt the source of infinite evil.
If you want COLD milk, you just put your glass (must be GLASS) of milk in the freezer for a few minutes.
Marisol
LOL! I put ice in my milk...but I don't allow the milk to melt in the milk. I usually drink it within a few minutes. I can't drink milk that isn't cold. But I'll try putting the glass in the freezer. Hmm, now that I think about it, perhaps I could just use my pint glasses that I keep in the freezer for beer. :o)
Daniel
Hey Heraclyde, thanks for the valued contribution. :)
Tim
If you drink whole milk, it's not that bad. If you don't drink it fast enough to keep the ice from melting, you can just stir it a little and it's like you have skim milk. No biggie.
heraclyde
Your post is absolutely stupid and totaly pure crap.
1. Something said or done to evoke laughter or amusement, especially an amusing story with a punch line. 2. A mischievous trick; a prank. 3. An amusing or ludicrous incident or situation. 4. Informal. 1. Something not to be taken seriously; a triviality: The accident was no joke. 2. An object of amusement or laughter; a laughingstock: His loud tie was the joke of the office.
v., joked, jok·ing, jokes.
v.intr.
1. To tell or play jokes; jest. 2. To speak in fun; be facetious.
v.tr.
To make fun of; tease.
[Latin iocus.] jokingly jok'ing·ly adv.
SYNONYMS joke, jest, witticism, quip, sally, crack, wisecrack, gag. These nouns refer to something that is said or done in order to evoke laughter or amusement. Joke especially denotes an amusing story with a punch line at the end: told jokes at the party. Jest suggests frolicsome humor: amusing jests that defused the tense situation. A witticism is a witty, usually cleverly phrased remark: a speech full of witticisms. A quip is a clever, pointed, often sarcastic remark: responded to the tough questions with quips. Sally denotes a sudden quick witticism: ended the debate with a brilliant sally. Crack and wisecrack refer less formally to flippant or sarcastic retorts: made a crack about my driving ability; punished for making wisecracks in class. Gag is principally applicable to a broadly comic remark or to comic by-play in a theatrical routine: one of the most memorable gags in the history of vaudeville.
dylan
Ice in milk isn't that bad. I do prefer it without, however.
Steve
Make ice cubes from milk to put in the milk so that when the ice cubes melts, it does not dulte the milk. I've only done this with fruit juices, punches, etc, but in theory, it should work the same (maybee)
beebee
Ice in milk is nasty
Spencer Lee
this is kinda wierd and i dunt think im supposed to be here, so see ya, and ice in milk is discusting