Pour it into a measuring cup, or if you can't do that, take the volume (LengthxWidthxHeight) of course that is difficult unless you have a rectangular pitcher, so I'd go with the measuring cup.
Mature milk contains whey protein and casein which do not coagulate n heating but coagulates with acidity( adding lemon ), however colostrum contains a high amount of lactoglobulin, to provide immunity to the newborn which makes the milk coagulate on heating.
i am 15 years old. i am 192.5cm tall. i drink a lot of milk every day. i hav an average of 6 bowls of cereal(with milk) per day. i would say i drink around a litre and a half of milk per day. i dont eat a lot of fruit and vegetables. i personally would say that milk makes you tall from my own experiences.
Anchor would be number one. There is also Meadow fresh, Tararua (not entirely sure if they do milk, but they do a lot of other dairy products) and Anlene
milk
A black cow would be the most commen in africa.
3gal
The unit of measurement for milk is litre (L) in the SI.
a graduated cylinder
gallons
Yes a teaspoon would be good to measure capacity of a milk carton.This is because density of milk is so close to that of water.
Yes a teaspoon would be good to measure capacity of a milk carton.This is because density of milk is so close to that of water.
Milk was collected in milk 'churns'.
Of course, how else would you measure how much milk you'd have? You could measure in Imperial gallons, but the metric Litre (or Liter) is also a common way to measure liquid substance (which what milk is, a liquid).
There is no limit to how much milk can be in a pitcher. There are different size pitchers available to the public.
the tool you use to measure milk in your cereal would be the measuring cup
The answer will completely depend on the capacity of that particular jug.
millimetres (centimetres could also be used)