By pouring it in the water.
Milk is adulterated by adding water to increase the volume. The producer buys milk from farmers by volume. A farmer could increase the volume by adding water to get more money from the producer.
Adding water to a substance or adding milk(i think) to sugar.
Condensed milk is made by evaporating water from cow's milk and adding sugar. The key steps in the production process include heating the milk to remove water, adding sugar for sweetness, and then packaging the condensed milk for storage and distribution.
This depends on the temperature, stirring, ratio milk/water, time of adding water to powder, volume of the water aliquotes, etc.
You can't. Milk contains a lot of water. so adding water is just diluting the milk. Besides "pure milk" is a very strange phrase since milk has many different components, and fresh milk isn't even homogeneous.
Normally, you boil the oats before adding milk to eat them.
it makes no difference weather you add the milk before or after the water. it still goes in the cup. :)
Water can be obtained from milk by evaporating it off of the moo juice. Heating milk will drive the water out of it. The result will be steam (or water vapor) and evaporated milk. The water vapor can be condensed to recover the water if necessary. Milk is routinely processed by heating to make evaporated milk (which can be made into condensed milk by adding sugar). It is further dried to recover just the milk solids for use as powdered milk and as a food additive. Links are provided to our friends at Wikipedia.
To convert dry milk to liquid milk, you need to reconstitute it by adding water. The ratio of dry milk to water is typically 1:4, which means that for every 1 part of dry milk, you need 4 parts of water.
Yes, you can substitute evaporated milk for regular milk in a recipe, but you may need to adjust the consistency of the recipe by adding water to the evaporated milk to reach the desired thickness.
I will dilute the gravy by adding the milk and heat.
by adding milk in it :P by adding milk in it :P