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When preparing juice from a frozen concentrate, the process of dissolving can be sped up. Adding hot water ad stirring are both ways to speed up the process.
You can buy and store some concentrated lemon juice, then add it as an ingredient or reconstitute it by adding water. Fresh lemon juice may also be available as a frozen concentrate that you can thaw and dilute.
When adding water to frozen orange juice concentrate, do not add too much, because excess dilution will result in an insipid flavor.
The melting point of the ingredients in your drinks have different values, water tends to be the last part of a drink or drinks to melt. For example Orange juice will start to melt before pure water, because it has started to melt first it has the abilty to take in more heat over a lesser surface area and the liquid will help it to melt faster as well.
apple juice will melt quickest.
In most cases an equal volume of juice will melt faster than an equal volume of ice
There is a lot of excess water in juice from lemons. The juice has some of its water removed by various methods, so that you can add more lemon flavor using less liquid. Similar processes are used with orange juice to thicken it before it is frozen to keep it fresh.
Even the "reconstituted" orange juice made by adding water to the frozen concentrate is a heterogeneous mixture because it would contain traces of orange pulp and other components of juice, not to mention the flavouring and other additives put in by the manufacturer.
you can heat it up or warm it- - - - -Put the frozen juice and water in your food processor, then turn it on. The food processor will chop up the frozen juice, which increases the surface area of the frozen juice and makes it easier for the heat in the water to melt the juice.
Bubbes
no
Keep the cauliflower white