BIGBOPPER
Apr 2, 2009, 02:10 AM
Okay. When I was working at my fomer job, as a habit I would bring gatorade lime rain 20 oz bottles with me and stick them in the freezer to get cold. I figured by my first break, they would be cold enough to drink one, and pop the other one in the fridge to save for lunch. Well a funny thing wouold happen.
I know that frozen liquid expands, so before I would put my warm drinks in, I would open them and take a drink, to give them room to expand if I didn't get to them in time. Now, on my first break, I'd pull the first one out of the freezer, they would be standing upright, and out of force of habit, I'd shake it. All of the sudden, the inside would turn into a slush that was thicker, more dense I think than a slushie type slush. Well it didn't harm the drink in any other way, in fact it made it fun to have a gatorade "slushie." Now what is behind that happening? Is it two different temperatures inside the bottle mixing? By the way, no other flavor of gatorade, Rain or otherwise, would do this.
Fast forward to the other morning. I like to keep a 1 liter bottle of water in my freezer with half of it full. When it freezes, I add water, and have cold water for a long time, something that I enjoy. Well, I had put it in the freezer later than usual, and when I got up in the middle of the night, for a constitutional, I popped an ice cube in my mouth (I have really bad dry mouth,) and saw that the water was at least cold. So I decided to drink a little from the bottle with the ice cube in my mouth. When I started, the water that touched the ice cube started to instantly freeze! I had little ice crystals coming off it. Now is that the same thing?
It was cool I know that. I have never been able to replicate the gatorade experiment with any other beverage, or freezer. There must have been something with the temperature level of the freezer at work, combined with the water content of the drink.
Anybody have any theories?
I know that frozen liquid expands, so before I would put my warm drinks in, I would open them and take a drink, to give them room to expand if I didn't get to them in time. Now, on my first break, I'd pull the first one out of the freezer, they would be standing upright, and out of force of habit, I'd shake it. All of the sudden, the inside would turn into a slush that was thicker, more dense I think than a slushie type slush. Well it didn't harm the drink in any other way, in fact it made it fun to have a gatorade "slushie." Now what is behind that happening? Is it two different temperatures inside the bottle mixing? By the way, no other flavor of gatorade, Rain or otherwise, would do this.
Fast forward to the other morning. I like to keep a 1 liter bottle of water in my freezer with half of it full. When it freezes, I add water, and have cold water for a long time, something that I enjoy. Well, I had put it in the freezer later than usual, and when I got up in the middle of the night, for a constitutional, I popped an ice cube in my mouth (I have really bad dry mouth,) and saw that the water was at least cold. So I decided to drink a little from the bottle with the ice cube in my mouth. When I started, the water that touched the ice cube started to instantly freeze! I had little ice crystals coming off it. Now is that the same thing?
It was cool I know that. I have never been able to replicate the gatorade experiment with any other beverage, or freezer. There must have been something with the temperature level of the freezer at work, combined with the water content of the drink.
Anybody have any theories?