Only in the sense that the more milk you have in a given volume, the less coffee and therefore caffeine will occupy the same volume.
Yes. Cappuccino is espresso coffee with foamed milk.
No. Coffee increases your heart rate because it contains caffeine, a stimulant. The milk has no effect.
Caffeine passes into breast milk and can affect the nursing baby. Nursing babies whose mothers use 600 mg or more of caffeine a day may be irritable and have trouble sleeping.
there is no caffeine in white chocolate, just in milk or dark. 2 answer ur ?, no
milk is cold. an example of how it affects coffee is this: you have hot water. put an ice cube in that. that's about the same rate as milk and coffee.
User responses: No. From what I have read caffeine does affect cholesterol levels and/or the way they can be interpreted when reading results of a cholesterol blood test. I would suggest that you be clean of any caffeine - three or more days ahead of time - to obtain a caffeine-free result.Advice seems to vary. Some say that black coffee (no sugar, no milk) is fine. Sources for that listed below.
Depending on your preference; Coffee, caffeine Water 18% cream or 2% white milk White sugar or Splenda Cream, milk and sugar dispensers are calibrated to the size of the beverage. More coffee means an increase in cream, milk and/or sugar proportional to the coffee size. Splenda is from individual packets.
I don't know about how it would affect a child's health, however, I wouldn't give a child coffee due to the caffeine. If you do, however, I would suggest to put milk in it so it would contain less caffeine. That's why they call coffee with milk, kids coffee.
yes
A typical 28-gram serving of a Milk Chocolate bar has about as much caffeine as a cup of decaffeinated coffee, although dark chocolate has about the same caffeine as coffee by weight. Some Dark Chocolate currently in production contains as much as 160 mg per 100 g - which is double the caffeine content of the highest caffeinated drip coffee by weight.
A typical 28-gram serving of a milk chocolate bar has about as much caffeine as a cup of decaffeinated coffee, although dark chocolate has about the same caffeine as coffee by weight. Some dark chocolate currently in production contains as much as 160 mg per 100 g - which is double the caffeine content of the highest caffeinated drip coffee by weight.
Milk is basic at 3 pH, and coffe is an an acid, so i don't think it would affect it at all.