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By Heidi Henderson | April 28th 2009 04:30 PM | 4 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
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About Heidi Henderson

Chair of the Vancouver Paleontological Society. Co-author of In Search of Ancient BC, Volume I, Heartland Publishing.
... Full Bio



Summer is coming. The time of camping and icy cold drinks. I've been working on developing a freeze dried beer that comes in a small pack and rehydrates fully carbonated with all its alcohol intact.

Once it goes to market you can say you knew me when. In the meantime, I can help with getting that warm six pack or vodka cooler cold in minutes. Geeky, yes, and yet you'll be so much more popular at summer parties.  

Understanding how salt and ice interact will save you from many a warm bevvie this summer.
Water freezes at 32 degrees F. (0 degrees C ) When the compound salt is added to water and ice, a new solution with a lower freezing temperature is formed. As the salt and ice molecules mix, the melting ice takes up heat energy from its surroundings and the surrounding water cools down fast. Why should you care? Well, this little scientific nugget can keep you from ever having to drink warm drinks again.

Instead of dropping your warm beverages into a cooler with ice, try adding water and a healthy dose of salt. And, there's no need to worry if some of that salt spills over into your drink. A little salt is good for you. Balances the electrolytes and makes tequila go down easier.

If you are in North America, you will likey be using iodized salt, which is table salt mixed with a minute amount of potassium iodide, sodium iodide, or sodium iodate. Iodized salt is used to bump up the amount of iodine in our systems and protect us from endemic goiter, a thyroid condition that arises from lack of iodine. In Europe, sodium fluoride or potassium fluoride is the more common additive, especially if they do not add fluoride to their drinking water. This is common in France, as is a slight yellowish tinge to the salt. Don't panic, the jaundice discoloration is a different culprit than yellow snow. They add a wee bit of liquid Vitamin B9, not urine Bless them, leaving a yellowish glow to the crystalline solid.

No matter which salt you choose, bada bing...  icy cold beverage in minutes.

Bebe, be a love and pass me a cold one. 

Comments

Modern science shows that ingesting fluoride is ineffective at reducing tooth decay and harmful to health

Adverse health effects of ingested fluoride:
http://www.FluorideAction.Net/health

Fluoridation not stopping tooth decay in fluoridated cities, states and countries
http://www.FluorideNews.blogspot.com

Fluoridation 101
http://www.orgsites.com/ny/nyscof

jtwitten's picture
These sites are operated by anti-fluoride advocates and contain no direct links to peer-reviewed research.  Please match your references to your claims (i.e., "modern science").

Fossil Huntress's picture
Appreciate the fluori-lesson. You may want to share that info with the French. I've crossed the pond over to sodium iodide. My interest in sodium fluoride was merely as a means to une boisson froide.

logicman's picture
This is common in France, as is a slight yellowish tinge to the salt.
Don't panic, the jaundice discoloration is a different culprit than
yellow snow. They add a wee bit of liquid Vitamin B9, not urine Bless
them, leaving a yellowish glow to the crystalline solid.

Was 'a wee bit of liquid' a deliberate pun, or a Freudian slip?  Come on, be honest.   :-)

Why do "they" put iodine and vitamins in table salt and then tell us that salt is bad for us?

http://www.marketresearchworld.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=vie...


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