Sentences with phrase «often than ice»

Start seeing a bowl of plain Greek yogurt with mixed berries as a healthy dessert alternative more often than ice - cream and your health (and waistline) will thank you!

Not exact matches

According to one former McDonald's shift manager: «If someone ordered an ice cream while employees were in the process of cleaning the machines, [the employees] often just said it was down rather than reassembling it.»
But one thing I'm not the worst about is that, more often than not, in my freezer between my empty ice cube trays and frozen pizza dough there are cookies.
Icing mixture often advertises itself as powdered sugar but can contain corn starch or other thickening agents, which will absorb more moisture than pure powdered sugar.
For this case, I tend follow our neighbors in Italy at the gelaterias, whose definition is perhaps more expansive than those used elsewhere as well as their ice creams (gelati) have less butterfat, and often only use milk, or soy milk, as I recently saw on my trip to Rome.
At the end of the day we'd call into the local Dairy (a corner store) and each choose a scoop of ice cream which, more often than not, ended up half melted down our hands before we'd even got back to the car.
But often, with some investigating you'll find the frozen yogurt is really no more than a glorified ice cream, loaded with refined sugars and even artificial ingredients.
With summer swaddling the country in a hot, humid blanket, few refreshments are more welcoming (i.e., necessary) than a cold beer plucked from an ice - filled cooler.Most often this means a barely boozy lager in the vein ofCoors, Busch, or their buds.
Harkness» boys at RPI tended to be slower than a lot of other teams, and it seemed that whenever a really fast - skating team came up to Troy the arena would get terribly warm, so warm that the ice often became soft and slushy.
Lidstrom gets more ice time than a bottle of Dom Perignon, often logging upwards of 30 minutes a game.
More often than I'd like to admit, I left a cartful of groceries in the middle of the aisle to run out to the car, or ducked into a bedroom, or surveyed a building upon arrival to find a hidden place to nurse, or lugged around an extra 15 lbs of bottles, pumped milk and ice, or made my crying, hungry child wait for a bottle to warm.
The mayor — who ran on the promise of representing the outer boroughs — opted to sign his first bill at a Brooklyn ice cream manufacturer, rather than the City Hall Blue Room, where bills are often signed.
Even in the country's Arctic reaches, the coast is typically free from ice and snow, and the weather is often more Seattle than Anchorage...
But, rapid change in the behavior of parts of the Antarctic ice sheet might cause much greater rise than is often included in coastal planning.
During its passage through the atmosphere, one side of an ice crystal often gets thicker and more heavily rimed than the other.
Particles in the rings are on average much brighter than Chariklo's surface because they often collide, exposing fresh, bright ice; meanwhile, Chariklo itself continues to accumulate dust, he suggests.
Since I am primarily dairy - free now I often make my own ice cream since it is cheaper and often healthier than the store - bought options.
For instance, the fiber content of fat - free ice creams and yogurts, which contain Func - tional Fibers as additives, is much less than 1 g / serving and therefore is often labeled as having 0 g of fiber.
But often, with some investigating you'll find the frozen yogurt is really no more than a glorified ice cream, loaded with refined sugars and even artificial ingredients.
Cobalt, ice, navy, baby, royal, periwinkle, cerulean, denim, twilight... I love them all, and more often than not I'm wearing at least one of them.
But it's not always easy to get the ball rolling, especially in our famously - reserved Britain, where we often prefer to tolerate an awkward silence than risk an ice - breaker with an attractive stranger.
For example, many of the ice platforms in the level crumble if jumped on more than twice, and objects such as Barrel Cannons and climbable, vine - covered walls are often connected to crumbling ice structures.
For those who have never blasted a beam of ice in the face of floating brain leeches before, the series follows the adventures of bounty hunter Samus Aran and her many encounters with parasitic organisms known as Metroids, who more often than not are in constant threat of being experimented on and fashioned into biological weapons by Space Pirates: the Galactic Federation's perennial enemies.
For those who have never blasted a beam of ice in the face of floating brain leeches before, the series follows the adventures of bounty hunter Samus Aran and her many encounters with parasitic organisms known as Metroids, who more often than not are in constant threat of being experimented on and fashioned into biological weapons by Space Pirates: the Galactic Federation's perennial enemies.
Her work — spanning more than 30 years — captures often overlooked aspects of contemporary American life: the LGBTQI community, California surfers, high school football players, Midwestern ice houses, Beverly Hills mansions, National Park landscapes, the Los Angeles freeway system and more.
It should also be clear that for any one locality, a shift in the storm tracks (associated with phenomena like the NAO or the sea ice edge) will often be more of an issue than the overall change in storm statistics.
The uncomfortable reality: Outside the basics (more CO2 = warming world = many climate shifts + less ice + rising seas) more research on complex scientific questions often leads to more questions rather than resolving the one at hand.
Would it be the Larsen taking 2 years to sail through the NW passage, instead of less than a week now a days??? Or is it some secret Nazi Arctic submarine navigation chart smuggled to Argentina after the war, the U-boats needed to surface often for air, and it was so ice free they had a regular sub charter schedule to Japan.
I believe the average life span of a glacial period is 90,000 years and often features NYC under more than a kilometer thick of ice.
«An «ice - free» Arctic Ocean is often defined as «having less than 1 million square kilometers of sea ice», because it is very difficult to melt the thick ice around the Canadian Arctic Archipelago.
Now, since 2007, at the height of the global warming scare tactics about arctic sea ice, the antarctic sea ice extents anomaly CONTINUOUSLY exceeds 1.25 Mkm ^ 2 for 3 years straight now, and is larger than 1.5 Mkm ^ 2 so often for such long times that it is not even newsworthy on a skeptic site.
And, if the world were to warm by 3C, the Arctic could experience an ice - free summer more often than every other year by the end of the century.
This substantial and rapid change of phase permits large ice crystals in a cloud surrounded by a large number of supercooled cloud droplets to grow quickly (often in less than 15 minutes) from tiny ice crystals to snowflakes.
4 Before the MWP, which had LESS sea ice than now, the first 7000 - 8000 year of the Holocene was often basically ice free in summer.
Note that regional proxies, such as the oxygen - isotope temperature reconstructions from the Greenland Ice Core Project that record Dansgaard - Oeschger events, often indicate faster regional rates of climate change than the overall global average for glacial - interglacial transitions, just as today warming is more pronounced in Arctic regions than in equatorial regions (Barnosky et al., 2003; Diffenbaugh and Field, 2013).
Also, some proxies show here that the last 3 million years, p.CO2 often could be similar — or higher — than the present (also in the period in which we have data from ice cores).
Greenland ice cores reveal that temperatures there were often warmer than today in the prior 10,000 years.
Hallegatte [8] notes that these sources of uncertainty will not go away in the foreseeable future: social uncertainties will play out over decades, and recent experiences of improving scientific understanding have often led to more uncertainty about the future rather than less [10], as the implications of unappreciated processes such as ice - sheet dynamics become clearer.
RealClimate is wonderful, and an excellent source of reliable information.As I've said before, methane is an extremely dangerous component to global warming.Comment # 20 is correct.There is a sharp melting point to frozen methane.A huge increase in the release of methane could happen within the next 50 years.At what point in the Earth's temperature rise and the rise of co2 would a huge methane melt occur?No one has answered that definitive issue.If I ask you all at what point would huge amounts of extra methane start melting, i.e at what temperature rise of the ocean near the Artic methane ice deposits would the methane melt, or at what point in the rise of co2 concentrations in the atmosphere would the methane melt, I believe that no one could currently tell me the actual answer as to where the sharp melting point exists.Of course, once that tipping point has been reached, and billions of tons of methane outgass from what had been locked stores of methane, locked away for an eternity, it is exactly the same as the burning of stored fossil fuels which have been stored for an eternity as well.And even though methane does not have as long a life as co2, while it is around in the air it can cause other tipping points, i.e. permafrost melting, to arrive much sooner.I will reiterate what I've said before on this and other sites.Methane is a hugely underreported, underestimated risk.How about RealClimate attempts to model exactly what would happen to other tipping points, such as the melting permafrost, if indeed a huge increase in the melting of the methal hydrate ice WERE to occur within the next 50 years.My amateur guess is that the huge, albeit temporary, increase in methane over even three or four decades might push other relevent tipping points to arrive much, much, sooner than they normally would, thereby vastly incresing negative feedback mechanisms.We KNOW that quick, huge, changes occured in the Earth's climate in the past.See other relevent posts in the past from Realclimate.Climate often does not change slowly, but undergoes huge, quick, changes periodically, due to negative feedbacks accumulating, and tipping the climate to a quick change.Why should the danger from huge potential methane releases be vievwed with any less trepidation?
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