Spyke
lemmy.dbzer0.com

Just drink the milk. It takes on a lot of the cereal flavor especially if it's a sweeter cereal and it's good.

12
shyguybluereply
lemmy.world

I used to do this, until i puked on one of my elementary school teachers.

3
  1. Use a square bowl placed on top of a circular plate.
  2. Add 11 parts water, then 2 parts cereal, using a mix of ancient Babylonian and traditional Japanese volumetric units (bonus points if you don’t actually convert them).
  3. Heat in the oven at 709 °R for exactly 73,037 ms. (Is that a decimal or thousand separator? Ask your local mathematics teacher.)
  4. Once heated, let it cool to exactly room temperature by placing it outside (regardless of the weather).
  5. Add a generous layer of cold ketchup on top, forming a smiley face.

Optional: Garnish with a sprig of mint and serve with a side of existential dread. Bon appétit!

26

So... basically 1 ketchup covered Ferrero Rocher? Hmmmm

4

Just enough so that, by the time I finish the cereal, there's only a little milk left.

Edit: The way I do it is to have a layer of granola on the bottom, then a layer of whatever floaty cereal on top. When I fill it with milk, it's a little bit below the top layer so that it's just a little less than what would make it float. That usually gives me the perfect ratio.

10

Put cereal in bowl, add milk until cereal is almost completely covered. Let sit for a minute to let cereal soak up some milk. This is for mini wheats mixed with another cereal. Mini wheats need a little soaking.

6

Just add milk until the entire pile of cereal starts to lift. Usually when the milk reaches the base level of the cereal itself.

5

By volume, usually I stop pouring milk when it covers approximately 4/5 of the cereal. That makes it so when I put my spoon in it, the cereal at the very top will also absorb some milk.

4

No milk in anything for 4+ years now.

Half a handful of:

  • fortified whatever-brand O's
  • peanuts
  • fruit and nut trail mix
  • top off with granola
  • prefect amount of water to end with a dry bowl but only barely

I thought my stomach issues were just a human thing. I always drank a bunch of milk. My chronic back issues from disability make me very sensitive to additional inflammation. So I tried eliminating milk one time for a few weeks to see how it affected me. It was night and day. I felt so much better that I never went back.

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lemmy.world

I think a good 80:20 to 90:10 cereal to milk. Just eyeballing it though.

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lemm.ee

You’re eating too much cereal my friend. Try using an 8:2 ratio for a few days and see if you feel better.

1

This guy coming over here not knowing what a zero is and trying to dunk on me. What a sad little guy.

You might want to eat some more cereal and get that brain working, friend.

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lemmy.world

I just fill the bowl with a lot of milk then take the box of cereal with me, and keep refilling until either I'm full or the milk's all gone.

2

I eat cereal like twice a year, if that. But yeah, when I do, one box tends to last me two meals. I don't really eat breakfast - when I have cereal it's because I'm craving it, and it's liable to replace my dinner at that point.

1

I don't know but for me having the ratio hit at the end of my meal could take just a bowl or a whole box. But I ain't stoppin' until the cereal and the milk are gone at the same time.

2

Fill the bowl with cereal nearly to the brim, then add milk until the cereal is at risk of spilling out.

2

Assuming enough of both, i still randomly pick between under, over, and evenly milked.

2

That depends on whether the cereal has the Crunch Enhancer, a non-nutritive cereal varnish. It’s semi-permeable, non-osmotic. It coats and seals the cereal, keeps it crunchy.

1

Input milk until bowl is halfway full, or over third full, depending on the size of the bowl.

Input cereal until bowl is full of cereal but cereal is still floating.

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lemmy.world

1 cup cereal, 1tsp powdered milk, 1/2 cup faucet water. Make sure the water is warm so that the powdered milk mixes better.

1

The solder used to seal many older water lines in houses, and even some lines in modern water heaters, contains lead, which can be released in smaller quantities through the heated water

2

If you can't see the milk, too little. If the bowl can possibly overflow while you're eating, too much. Can't give an exact ratio, but that's the line I live on.

1