For me this would depend. If it's just for me, I measure using a clean finger. I pour liquid number one into the mug or cup and then I pour the second. I immediately get a spoon and mix.
If it's for someone else, I keep plastic cups around. Plastic because I can feel the level of the liquid rising in the cup if the liquid is kept really cold or warm/hot. I pour liquid number one in first, then pour it into the mug or cup, and then I do the same for liquid number 2. It's a bit more work but I'm okay with this because I'm comfortable with my system. If my company is drinking out of a glass instead of a mug and the liquid is cold enough, I just pour right into the glass because I can feel the liquid rising through the glass. Hope that helps. On 12/27/15, Parham Doustdar via Cookinginthedark <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi, > > I asked a few weeks back about pouring liquid into containers, and > people responded with wonderful methods. I have gotten a liquid > indicator, which works really well! > > However, my question now is how people here mix things in a glass. It > has probably happened a lot that you have wanted to have a mix of two > liquids in a glass, but you needed them to be equal, or needed one to be > more than the other. How do you do this? > > Thanks all in advance for your great answers! > _______________________________________________ > Cookinginthedark mailing list > [email protected] > http://acbradio.org/mailman/listinfo/cookinginthedark > -- Twitter: @bachatadancer Blog: mykaleidoscopesoul.wordpress.com _______________________________________________ Cookinginthedark mailing list [email protected] http://acbradio.org/mailman/listinfo/cookinginthedark
