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Jun 21 2011 12:02pm
to 1 liter of kool aid? the small pack with no sugar added
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Jun 21 2011 12:05pm
A common way is to use one cup of sugar per packet Kool-Aid.
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Jun 21 2011 12:06pm
theres a huge range between a normal cup a small cup and a large cup
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Jun 21 2011 12:06pm
Quote (iDGames @ Jun 21 2011 12:05pm)
A common way is to use one cup of sugar per packet Kool-Aid.


I thought that was for 2 quarts of kool-aid too.
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Jun 21 2011 12:11pm
Quote (TheodoreCancer @ 21 Jun 2011 20:06)
theres a huge range between a normal cup a small cup and a large cup


One cup as a unit of measurement is around 240 millilitres.

Quote (FoRSaKeN- @ 21 Jun 2011 20:06)
I thought that was for 2 quarts of kool-aid too.


Well, I googled about this and all I can find is one cup of sugar per packet.

This post was edited by iDGames on Jun 21 2011 12:11pm
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Jun 21 2011 12:17pm
You could slowly add sugar, stir it up then taste it until you achieve a mixture that you like.
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Jun 21 2011 12:18pm
Quote (Markro @ Jun 21 2011 06:17pm)
You could slowly add sugar, stir it up then taste it until you achieve a mixture that you like.


^^legit method.
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Jun 21 2011 12:20pm
Quote (TheodoreCancer @ Jun 21 2011 12:06pm)
theres a huge range between a normal cup a small cup and a large cup


no theres not learn to cook
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Jun 21 2011 12:20pm
also keep in mind the solubility of sugar is lower at colder temperatures, so you want to mix it in while it is cold to ensure uniformity
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Jun 21 2011 01:00pm
Quote (Sgull @ Jun 21 2011 12:20pm)
also keep in mind the solubility of sugar is lower at colder temperatures, so you want to mix it in while it is cold to ensure uniformity


He is right.

C6H12O6 + H20 = C6H12O6

If you add heat to the left side, it shifts the equilibrium to the right in turn dissolving more of your sugar. (Le Chatelier's Principle)

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