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Icin' the Tea (Posted on 2004-03-09) Difficulty: 1 of 5
This actually happened to me...

  My wife and I were cookin' a Cajun feast for the anniversaire de ma mere. While I handled the vittles, the lovely and talented Mrs. Boy made the drinks.
  She had made the tea strong and wanted to dilute it with 4 cups of water but the guests were at the door and the tea was still hot so she decided to dilute it with ice instead.
  She turned to me and said, "Fat, sweetie, how many ice cubes make a cup of water?"
  I confessed that I did not know as I had not measured the water when I made the cubes. To make matters worse I had not paid attention to how full I had made the trays so we couldn't just refill them and see how much they held.
  Things seemed desperate, as I'd die before I'd serve my Gumbo without sweet tea, but Mrs. Boy is no fool and she found a way. The tea was just right (though the cheese grits were a little burnt).

How did Mrs. B manage to ascertain the proper number of ice cubes to produce the 4 cups of water needed to dilute the tea? All she had to use was the ice cubes themselves, an ungraduated glass pitcher of unknown volume and the 4 cup graduated Pyrex measuring cup full of (too strong) tea.

See The Solution Submitted by FatBoy    
Rating: 3.3333 (6 votes)

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My solution | Comment 15 of 38 |
The pyrex measuring cup, is graduated, it is filled with 4 cups of hot tea. You want to add 4 cups of water, using cubes...

Pour out two cups (50%) of the hot tea into the glass picture.
Slowly add ice cubes to pyrex measuring cup.
Let the ice cubes melt, which they should quite quickly. Count the number of ice cubes, until the pryex glass has 4 cups of liquid again.
Dump the pyrex measuring cup into the glass picture. (Now 50% tea, 50% water)
Add the same amount of ice cubes to the glass picture.

Assumes:
all ice cubes are equal size, density, etc.
you have time to let them melt

Miles

  Posted by miles purdy on 2004-03-17 10:00:49
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