Cartons
A Newton..
To find the volume of milk, you can use a measuring cup or a graduated cylinder, both of which are designed to measure liquid volumes accurately. For larger quantities, a kitchen scale can also be used by measuring the weight of the milk and converting it to volume using the density of milk (approximately 1.03 g/mL). If you're measuring in a recipe, a standard measuring jug would suffice for most household purposes.
You can certainly use any "metric" graduated cylinder or such and convert to gallons. The problem is that few scientific instruments are made in gallons, and most household items aren't celebrated. Probably the best thing would be a pyrex measuring pitcher. Another thing you could do is to take a gallon milk jug, or a bucket. Tare it on a scale. Then measure out an amount of water equal to 8 pounds and mark it. You now have a custom gallon measuring jug.
it depends on what your measuring if you want mass use grams if you want weight use Newtons or pounds if you want vollume use liters or pints ect. but for what i think your doing you would use either milliliters or centameters
None, really, because a gallon is not a metric unit. A litre is the appropriate unit to use for measuring volumes.
a graduated cylinder
Used on soy milk application
A Newton..
by the gallon here by liters in countries that use metric
A measuring cup. ------------- ------3-------- ------2----- - -----1-------- -----------
You can easily shop on eBay or artfire.com and they have malted milk crackers
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.
no
milk in a full jug
Yes, turbidity can be used as a measurement parameter to test milk quality. It assesses the clarity of the milk by measuring the amount of suspended particles in the liquid. Higher turbidity levels can indicate poorer quality or contamination in milk.
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Mrs Alison's has also been discontinued. The only cracker we milk lunch lovers have left are Heritage Mills Milk Lunch Crackers . You can find them on famousfoods.com.