ok, honest question since I don't cook. is pipette and measurement glass really helpful in cooking?
I'm pretty sure the regular cooking measurement tools are accurate enough in cooking but if you want to go FULL SCIENCE then I suppose you could use chemistry tools.
ok, honest question since I don't cook. is pipette and measurement glass really helpful in cooking?
oh, TL bump please... I beg you, Translator-sama! this epic series must not be hindered by tower of babel curse!
Higusan said:
I'm pretty sure the regular cooking measurement tools are accurate enough in cooking but if you want to go FULL SCIENCE then I suppose you could use chemistry tools.
Pasteur pipettes (droppers) in the 1~3 mL range can be very useful, especially the disposable plastic (polypropylene) ones, even if you're just transferring small amounts of liquids without bothering to measure anything. For greater precision you can manually calibrate a glass/polycarbonate one and add extra volume markings, but for most purposes this is completely unnecessary unless you're making picking liquids (for smaller batches, or if you're too lazy to weigh out every additive) or are going full-on molecular gastronomy with use of flavor injections/emulsifiers/thickeners/other additives.
Standard glass pipettes and measuring cylinders are completely overkill though, because you don't need that amount of precision in cooking when you're dealing with such quantities of liquids.
Water - 35 L Carbon - 20 kg Ammonia - 4 L Lime - 1.5 kg Phosphorous - 800 g Salt - 250 g Saltpeter - 100 g Sulfur - 80 g Fluorine - 7.5 g Iron - 5 g Silicon - 3 g ... and fifteen traces of other elements.
Time to make some humans ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
Why does her "affection" feel like drugging?Dividing that into 3, and taking into account the nutritional value of eggs, milk and butter...For a 23 year-old male of height 177cm, weight 63kg, their daily nutritional requirements are as such.For the vitamins that are lacking, we'll add in some liquid supplements.Also, a bit of concentrated plant-based vitamin K...Liquid-soluble dietary fibre.