Japanese Scientists Have Created Ice Cream That Doesn’t Melt. Here's How
IANS, 08 Aug, 2017 01:20 PM
Scientists in Japan have come up with a ‘cool’ solution to stop ice cream from melting before you have had time to finish it. They’ve invented one that doesn’t melt.
Ice cream starts melting just moments after it is scooped from a container and placed into a bowl or on a cone. Because of this, people have taken to eating it quickly. Now, researchers from Kanazawa University in Japan claim to have found a way to maintain the shape of ice cream by increasing its melting point.
The product can last three hours at room temperature with hardly any melting, The Times reported. Researchers tested the ice cream by blowing hot air on it for five minutes using a hairdryer. It retained its shape.
Scientists have adapted the ice cream by injecting it with polyphenol liquid extracted from strawberries. Polyphenol liquid has properties to make it difficult for water and oil to separate,” Tomihisa Ota, a professor at Kanazawa University, was quoted as saying.
An ice cream containing this liquid “will be able to retain the original shape for longer than usual and be hard to melt,” he said. The weather-resistant ice cream comes in different flavours including chocolate, vanilla and strawberry.
IIn classics like "The Cask of Amontillado," ''The Murders in the Rue Morgue," ''The Masque of the Red Death" and more, the master of horror fiction gave us imagery that have long inspired Halloween aficionados and lovers of all things spooky
BENTONVILLE, Ark. - The first thing you encounter at a new contemporary art show at Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art is the "Mom Booth," where a woman in an apron sits at a table.
VANCOUVER - "Dallas Buyers Club" had its moment of glory at the Academy Awards earlier this year, a night two decades in the making for screenwriter Craig Borten, who penned the first version of the film's script in 1992.