Friday, December 18, 2009

Is Ice Cream Measured as a liquid or a Solid?

I believe it is a liquid, BUT just in case. Like is it measured by Gallons [liquid] or Ounces/Pounds [in some cases liquids, but more likely solids].Is Ice Cream Measured as a liquid or a Solid?
Liquid ... think about it.. it's more likely that you buy a gallon of ice cream, than a pound of ice cream, that is for measurement. But for physical properties, I think that it would be more a solid than a liquid, since liquids take the shape of the container that they are poured into, and ice cream does not do that, at least while frozen.Is Ice Cream Measured as a liquid or a Solid?
I generally measure it out in bowls and further divide it by tablespoons.
could be measured as both in probably more accurate to measure by mass because of the expansion of water as it freeze but its measured by volume in the store so it really could be either. most stuff is measured by mass not volume because volume can changes as states change but mass is constant
When you go to get ice cream, it comes in pint, quart, half gallon, or gallon cartons. Those are liquid measurements.
Ice cream is measured as a liquid, in litres.
It's measured in Quarts or Liters, usually.


Sometimes it is sold by the half-gallon.


It's measured in terms of liquids, but I consider it a solid.


At any rate, it tastes amazing and I'm going to go eat some right now.
i believe liquid
The ice cream can be measured any way, but I think it should be measured in the state of matter it's currently in.
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