Instant Ice Cream
Explore states of matter in the tastiest way—by instantly turning milk into ice cream.
This activity may be Messy
Explore states of matter in the tastiest way—by instantly turning milk into ice cream.
This activity may be Messy
What will I need?
Top tip: Be careful not to spill any of the salty ice water or mix it with your ice cream as you get it out of the bag.
- What do you see happening to the ingredients?
- Can you make the ice cream freeze faster? Try altering the amount of salt or how much you shake the mixture.
- Try different ingredients—do they behave in the same way?
Pure water freezes at 0 degrees Celsius. Add salt and the freezing point drops by a few degrees. When you add salt to the ice in the outer bag, the ice (at 0°C) is now above its freezing point—so it begins to melt.
Melting requires energy, and in this case that energy comes from the flavoured milk mixture in the inner bag. Ice crystals start to grow in-between the tiny globules of fat in the milk and bubbles of air, causing the milk to freeze and change state from a liquid to a solid.
During the winter, grit spreaders often throw rock salt onto major roads if the temperature is forecast to drop below freezing. When snow falls on the salt, it melts in the same way as the ice in the outer bag in the activity. And spreading the salt before the temperature drops below 0°C means ice cannot form on the road—unless the temperature plunges much lower.