No. It will be kinda like a sponge. Totally gross.You can freeze the cups of pudding you buy in stores, just let them thaw at room temperature and they come out just the same as before you froze them!
the result of freezing and thawing and freezing is frost boil
by the coldness of freezing and the warmness of thawing
Freezing and thawing are examples of phase changes that occur when a substance transitions between solid and liquid states due to changes in temperature. This process is known as freezing when a substance transitions from liquid to solid, and thawing when it transitions from solid to liquid.
get a lifeor get a girlfrioend
thawing
You cannot freeze chocolate pudding, and expect it retain its integrity after thawing - as for any milk-based custard. The ice crystals that formed upon freezing will melt and drain, leaving your pudding separated, cracked and lumpy, and your crust soggy.
Melting and freezing are the correct terms for this phase change.
It is thawing.
chemical change
Potholes and breaks in rocks from the freezing and thawing cycle are caused by water seeping into cracks in the rock, freezing and expanding, and then thawing and contracting. This repeated cycle weakens the rock and can eventually lead to the formation of potholes or breaks.
Freezing a rock would shrink it some (contract) while the thawing would expand it. This applies to most substances, water being the obvious exception.
no it is not melting is the reverse of freezing