No. Ice and water are the same substance (they're both water); the only difference is the state of matter the two are in. Milk and coffee are different substances and they're in the same state of matter.
if you have ice in it the ice will melt and get out
Milk, gas, ice tea, oil, water.
homozygous
As opposed to pure water? yes. i suppose it could be considered an impurity if you are striving for pure water. But if your goal is to make coffee, and the 2 ingredients you need are hot water and coffee, then no, i would not consider coffee and impurity. In that case, milk, or salt, or murcury, or dog feces would all be considered impurities in your pure cup of coffee. Purity in this case is really a matter of perspective
Sugar in water, salt in water, milk in coffee.
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.
I bet it would be great if you used Coffee-Mate flavored creams!
Brew a pot of fresh coffee using 2 tablespoons of dark-roasted coffee ground per cup. Transfer the hot coffee to a carafe or pitcher. Let the coffee stand at room temperature for 3 to 5 hours, or refrigerate it until cold, about 1 and a half to 3 hours. Fill a tall glass with ice cubes. Pour the chilled coffee into the glass. Stir the coffee to equalize its temperature. Add milk if you like.
water
milk, water, coffee
Obviously a glass of milk! Hot tea or coffee Ice Cream! Frosting - as a filling or a dip for the cookie.
No, coffee is not mostly milk. It is mostly coffee.
Water/milk or tea/coffee. Or vodka.
coffee is a bean that grows in hot countries, it gets blended tomake coffee grains.....if you mean how do you make a cup of coffee its quite simple really, boil the kettle, add a teaspoon of coffee, sugar if desired, add the boiling water and add your specified milk....walllah a cup of coffee....... to make a real testiest coffee as he said to boil coffee when u done with that put 1 spoon of sugar, then 1 spoon of chocolate powder, then put less than half of a cup milk and then put the coffee much as you want and then just drink it i hope u will like it thank you
Can you? Technically, yes. Should You? Absolutely not. The milk is heated to boiling temperatures inside the coffee maker. This will cause a couple of problems: the milk could coagulate and clog the coffee maker. Also, the milk residue will collect inside the coffee maker and spoil. Some coffee makers actually have a holding tank to store hot water so there is hot water on demand when you want to make a pot of coffee. If you pour milk in, it will displace the hot water and leave the milk in the holding tank until you make your next pot. That means the milk would be heated and left in the holding tank to breed bacteria until you make the next pot of coffee. Either way it is a recipe for disaster. Don't do it!!! You are tottlay right! besides if there was any milk not used you know like left over and it was not much, but still it would go rotton!
Ground coffee beans and water. Also milk and sugar, if you take it. :)
With Nescafe and hot, not boiling water, but no milk or cream.