I am currently using plastic
ice cube trays which DO NOT make me happy!
500g coconut water frozen into ice cubes (I used 2
ice cube trays which made about 400g but the gin balances it out)
Not exact matches
For my pot of soup, some of
which can be frozen too, popped in
ice cube trays for easy access to soup for kiddie meals, I used around 600g of butternut squash, I did weigh it for the benefit of this blog post but usually I just use a medium Butternut Squash.
I love my silicone
ice cube tray not only for making perfectly square
cubes of
ice for cocktails,
which always look nicer than the
cubes out of the freezer.
My daughter likes split pea soup too so I freeze it in an
ice cube tray then transfer the frozen
cubes into a bag
which I keep in the freezer.
Our has never grown those long, thick stalks, but I experimented last fall (
which comes early here in Minnesota) by making sort of a celery broth after the crop froze in the garden, then froze the broth in
ice cube trays.
If you're wondering about the
ice cubes, we use these
trays —
which make much smaller
cubes than standard
ice cube trays.
Ice cube trays are open at the top,
which leaves the milk exposed to potential contaminants.
Most
ice cube trays» sections are made to hold 1 ounce of a substance,
which is a great portion to start with.
An easy way to do this with very young babies is to purchase small
trays, similar to
ice cube trays,
which can be used to store small portions of pureed foods.
Place the
ice -
cube tray into the freezer and — once the
cubes are firm — press them out and place them into zip - top bags,
which take up less space in your freezer.
Note: This makes a thick broth
which can be frozen in
ice cube trays for «instant» chicken broth when needed in recipes.
Pour the coconut oil mixture into gel pack (
which I found HERE) or
ice cube trays (preferably metal
trays... you don't want to put hot stuff in plastic).
Really, anything works,
ice cube trays or even a small glass dish from
which you cut the candy like fudge will all do the trick.
But even during this more dramatically charged second hour, Lee's touch remains restrained and subtle (save for overtly metaphorical shots of
ice cubes and
ice cube trays), eschewing melodramatic confrontations, ever - so - subtly building to the moving finale,
which is exquisite in its deceptive simplicity: in just one singular action, Lee deftly ties up the film's themes of family and belonging.
It holds at least 30 cans,
which is plenty of space for dorm - room eating habits, and it even has a tiny freezer shelf for a small
ice cube tray.