Assuming, of course, that you mean the same thing that the dairy industry does, you use milk stone remover - a mixture of detergents and phosphoric acid, available at any farm supply store in a dairy area. This is used on dairy equipment, and is the only sense of "milk stone" that I'm familiar with.
No! A stone is a loose impediment. A sand trap is a hazzard. You cannot remove a stone from a hazzard if the stone and ball are in the same hazzard. Penalty...one stroke.
yes it can
From my studies i have found out that milk is a solvent for ink ,I therefore, can conclude that milk can be used to remove ink stain.
It is likely you will be in pain as long as you have the kidney stone.
Cold Stone Creamery is the nation's top producer of evaporated milk, cream, and milk substitutes. Their products are sold at a wide variety of supermarkets and retail stores nationwide.
get a pin and pop it ! ;D
It a dog has a bladder stone in the urethra, it will need a surgical procedure to remove it. This is a serious condition is it is unable to pass it on its own.
unfortunately milk will retain a burnt taste. you need to start over.
Basically a stone that is formed in the kidney (hence the name) from build up of materials such as Calcium (milk) and sugar. These can also be hereditary.
Milk solids are what you get if you take milk and remove the water from it. They are mostly made of fats, proteins, sugars, and a small amount of mineral ash.
Milk does not have oil in it; but it does contain animal fat. There are ways to remove the natural animal fat that occurs in milk which is where you get 2% milk and skim milk from. The fat can also be separated to make cream and butter.
No, but phosphoric acid may help a kidney stone form.