Vivi mannequin Actually you can. You simply add vinegar to the milk, extract the solid that forms, dry it out, place it between the cracks of a plate or other piece of kitchenware, and bake it in an oven.
My goodness. You have got to have one of the most interesting science/experiment shows here from milk made dinnerware to black holes !! And you explain things so thoroughly. Amazing.
For the linguistics nerds out there: "casein" comes from the same origin as the word "cheese." It's more obvious if you compare it to the German "Käse" or the Spanish "queso."
Note to people who came here hoping to find a solution for their broken ceramics: Boiling your mug or whatever in milk can work! At least for hairline cracks, which was the deal with me. I put the mug in a pot on its side so the entire crack could be covered. I only filled the pot up enough so the crack was fully covered so I didn't waste more (whole) milk than I needed to. I put the heat on low and left it there for an hour. You could see the proteins kinda forming a bio-plastic film almost on the top as it heated. After an hour, I let it cool COMPLETELY then hand-washed it with cold water + Dawn the next day. Then I filled it up with water to check and like 90% of the crack was sealed, with water leaking only out of two specific spots. Since there was improvement, I planned to do it again later that day and set the mug aside. Later, while showing someone else, I filled it with water again and this time it was totally sealed, no leaks at all. I guess it needed more time to cure or whatever? This was almost a week ago and it's still going strong. The crack is definitely still visible, but it doesn't leak at all, so I'm satisfied. Only used it with cold drinks the first two days, then tried a hot drink and it still held up. Haven't put it through the dishwasher yet- I've just been hand-washing it with cold water to be safe after each use. Just wanted to let y'all know to not lose hope just yet! Idk how a COMPLETELY broken ceramic would do but I'm curious to find out honestly.
Before the video starts: Oh come on what is this nonsense this time? He always does this! After the video: *MIND. BLOWN.* I just need to learn to trust you. There's always something interesting even in the most mundane- or absurd-seeming things. :D
Feel ya. I've learned to just trust him and watch. I like how he doesn't react to stupid ideas at first. Oh this isn't gonna work etc. He lets us watch him do it and discover the answer together.
We've had flying cars since the 50's, maybe earlier. Nobody wanted them. (To fly a car, you need a pilot's license. We'll see where autonomous vehicles get us.)
@@Crecross I guess you don't know the story between Edison and Tesla.. Edison was DC and Tesla was AC. Since DC is not good for distances, guess who won out. It is a very high-brow way to stick it to Edison beyond the grave. He can wear an Edison shirt on July 10th. Think of it as a video with an Easter egg.
This dude reminds of my nerdiest friend in high school. Super intelligent, extremely competent in science, a funny sort of voice, boundless enthusiasm for anything interesting, and always smiling. He's a multi millionaire many times over today. Nerds always win.
I wonder if he actually waited 2 days to take the tape off or used common sense to know it wouldn’t work and just cut like 15 seconds to take the tape off
Jared Bryan ya I would say so because the milk would have a layer over the top of it and stuff. but of course he is going to make people think that he tried it or everyone in the comments is going to say how he didn’t try it.
Like, you just have to search it on youtube, a bunch of videos out there about that. But then why are you wasting your time asking it here? I bet he won't travel to Siberia just to show you you can freeze bubbles
Vishav My country (England) Milk: depends where you get it from but where my mum gets it from it’s about £1 Plate: where my mum gets plates a cheap one is £5 and and expensive one is £10. Pack of them cost £20
This recipe is known to Indians since ages. This is called paneer except the last heating part. And instead of vinegar, we use some regular salt while heating the milk right in the beginning. That separates the proteins that you need.
Wow! Thanks for making this video, actually I had my 12th grade project on this topic. Milk contains coagulable and non-coagulable proteins and casein is the coagulable protein because it can coagulate when some acid or rennet tablets are added. The non-coagulable proteins are a-lactalbumin and b-lactoglubulin . These are found in the whey milk. In fact whey milk is same as butter milk. The presence of proteins can be detected using millons reagent!
You "had did"? English must not be your first language, because anyone who has finished the third grade would know that "had did" is not correct English.
wow I was about to totally make fun of you for even entertaining the first experiment but that second demonstration was super impressive! I like how you used total fake social media junk to turn it into something really educational
Three days ago, I watched this on acid and for real, what? I still don't get it. Best science channel, because of the genuine personality of its creator.
Excellent video! Just something to note, in the cheese making process, it's not that they use bacteria (at least not primarily), but they use rennet, which is mainly obtained from animal source and it's an enzyme that denatures the proteins in a somewhat different manner, so it ends of more like a clot instead of very little strands, which is important when making cheese. There's now microbial rennet and other ways to do it, but that's was the way it used to be. Anyway, the important thing is that milk has been an important part in culture in many ways!!
@@rdizzy1 Note that it's not the same using microbial rennet than the fermenting process that bacteria and yeast make. Microbial rennet is almost the same than animal rennet in the same way than microbial insulin, as it's a byproduct which the bacteria makes, which is then extracted, and it's that extract what is used (an enzyme, so you don't use the organism itself for the process), unlike the fermenting process, where you use the actual organism
@@maxmustermann3938 Yeah, at the beginning it could've been that and then someone decided to use rennet (why, I don't know for sure). The difference is in the properties of the final product. A yeast or a bacteria will first ferment it and so the pH will be lower and that's what will cause the clot to form, but it's slower and using pH to form cheese you normally end up with small particles dispersed, as you can see in the video, and with a very different flavor too, due to acidity. When you use rennet, it forms a big clot, like a gelatin which, depending on what you want, you might prefer it over the other method, but yeah, you are right on that! Many good things resulted in what we know today as fine products due to very ehmm "dirty" environments.
@@rdizzy1 Oh, I see!! Great fact then! I didn't knew it was used that much. I thought the microbial one was not used that much, so maybe I think that animal rennet will be used only in small production for gourmet cheeses and the like. Thanks!
In india we call this Paneer(milk protein) and this is a food product but then also being so common no one ever think of making plates with it😂😂 . . . . . . . *So Productive* 😂😂
Hey James, since you're clearly capable of extracting milk from chicken, and then unboil its eggs, I have a task for you: Can you extract pink dye from white t-shirts (you know as when you put them in the washing machine them together with something you though was black, but turned out to be really-dark-red for example, and then it dissolves just enough dye to make everything quite pink :) ) Great channel! I'm really enjoying it!
Wow! After finishing watching this I think you should make a line of dishes to replace toxic plastics!! That would be so cool. If they end up in the ocean it won’t do the damage that our plastics do now
You’re very good at explaining things. Can you please please make teaching videos like the khan academy where you teach the basics of chemistry because that would be helpful since I’m in chem now
His physics is good, but his chemistry is sometimes hit or miss. It makes sense because he's a physicist, not a chemist. I'm a chemistry tutor. I'm in the process of making videos on my other channel, but they aren't ready yet. However, I do recommend seeking out the channel called "The Organic Chemistry Tutor." His videos are made in a similar way as Khan Academy, but he goes through the effort of giving LOTS of examples and always works it out step by step so that you can pause the video, see if you get the same answer, and then learn why it was done differently if your answer was not correct. He doesn't just do organic chemistry. He does all chemistry, physics, and math! Tyler DeWitt does really good Chem I videos, also. He's very charismatic and not boring to watch. Good luck. Chemistry is loads of fun! :)
We drink this? Whoa! No wonder you had so much trouble with milk as a kid! Wow! Whey cool! lol. Loved the milk plate and milk cup and drinking milk out of a milk cup! lf l ever run out of clean plates, l can make me a new one :) loved it!
Hi there! I actually found something that worked for me. I'll paste my comment here: "Note to people who came here hoping to find a solution for their broken ceramics: Boiling your mug or whatever in milk can work! At least for hairline cracks, which was the deal with me. I put the mug in a pot on its side so the entire crack could be covered. I only filled the pot up enough so the crack was fully covered so I didn't waste more (whole) milk than I needed to. I put the heat on low and left it there for an hour. You could see the proteins kinda forming a bio-plastic film almost on the top as it heated. After an hour, I let it cool COMPLETELY then hand-washed it with cold water + Dawn the next day. Then I filled it up with water to check and like 90% of the crack was sealed, with water leaking only out of two specific spots. Since there was improvement, I planned to do it again later that day and set the mug aside. Later, while showing someone else, I filled it with water again and this time it was totally sealed, no leaks at all. I guess it needed more time to cure or whatever? This was almost a week ago and it's still going strong. The crack is definitely still visible, but it doesn't leak at all, so I'm satisfied. Only used it with cold drinks the first two days, then tried a hot drink and it still held up. Haven't put it through the dishwasher yet- I've just been hand-washing it with cold water to be safe after each use. Just wanted to let y'all know to not lose hope just yet! Idk how a COMPLETELY broken ceramic would do but I'm curious to find out honestly."
4:58 - Alpha helices don’t form because of “electric charges on the molecules”. They are stabilised due to hydrogen bonds between amides along the peptide backbone. 6:00 - Also, adding acid won’t neutralise the structure (positively charged residues will remain positive when the protein is protonated further)
I figured out a new way to fix a plate Step 1: get a broken plate Step 2: find some warm milk Step 3: pour some vinegar in and wait 20 minutes Step 4: then filter the milk so there is only this powder left Step 5: apply the powder to the plate Step 6: put it in the oven at warm heat for 6-12 hours And you fixed your plate!
I like his dedication dude, hats off really enjoy watching your videos. His determination for drinking milk with something made out of milk is simply awesome 💯💯
Mrs. Beeton's Book of Household Management (1861) has a recipe for a milk-based glue for repairing china that I always scoffed at. Now, thanks to you, I know the power of casein, I scoff no longer.
Very nice 👍 What you made initially is called chhena(used to make to make desserts(mithai) in India), or cottage cheese. If you strained it, you would get paneer AKA farmer cheese(a fresh cheese used to make delicious Indian vegetarian foods(basically curries)). I never knew that it can get that hard.
@Evi1M4chine I don't understand your point, did you reply to the wrong comment 😂 Did you mean not to confuse the chemicals with the original products or else you can get sick, if so, I didn't say if it was practical or safe.
@@topher10 Well at least it does something, even if it's not practical or beautiful :P but then again it would be better to put heat resistant food grade silicone, or some other heat proof adhesive.
This is the best channel on RUclips because it click baits you into learning
Yeah, that's basically this channel in a nutshell lol
Mx. Yellow but then he actually does it
The title said can
Omg YES 😂! This is the only channel I watch that isn't filled with trash hahaha
No, no. He's got a point.
*To show the power of the action lab tape, I hammered this plate into 4 pieces!*
that's a lotta milk
The best thing is that u broke it in not 2 peices nor 3 peaces but 4 peices!!!!
(Phil swift is crying )
But don't eat em', that'll cause a lot of damage!
I sawed this boat in half!!!
You spelled tape wrong
you spelt it tap lol
Wife: "Honey what happened to all our plates?"
He: "I'm smashing them, but don't worry I'll repair them with MILK"
Wife: .......
It didnt work but I made plates out of milk!
wife: Oh my Gosh
**Smashes plate** "Ooooouuu He need sum milk!!!"
IM FIXING THE PLATES WITH MILK HONEY Rang through my head as I read this comment
Ehehe
Like your creativity and madness towards science!
I'm gonna reply for no reason
I'm gonna reply for no reason²
I'm gonna reply for no reason³
Im gonna reply for no reason⁴
I'm gonna reply for no reason⁵
But can you make milk out of plate?
yes, just break the plate.
Nmoo
In Soviet Russia plates are only source of protein.
@@BossitroniuM Alternately: In Soviet Russia, broken plates milk you.
But can you make plate into milk?
he took the phrase “milk makes your bones stronger” to a whole nother level
Just "Milk makes bones" now
@@WEE9 it always did
Magnesium makes your bones stronger...
HE MILK GAAAAAANG
Nother 🤣🤣🤣🤣
"Ok drinking milk out of milk"
This guy lives in 3019
Lmao
@@CommissarCail brofist 👊
3030*
“Oh it’s leaking” 😂
First they use ramen noodles to fix a broken sink, and now they use milk to fix a plate😂
Ghetto not science
7:06 I just realised he's actually making indian cottage cheese better known as paneer
I was searching for paneer in the comments😂
@@unnati_dutt same lmao
That's just basic curd.
@@satyakisil9711 actually it's not.. curd doesn't has the same consistency
@@synestia6884 not to offend anyone but does it better than it looks?
Don’t cry over spilt milk... because you can use it to fix broken kitchenware
Carter Thomas actually you can't
Vivi mannequin Actually you can. You simply add vinegar to the milk, extract the solid that forms, dry it out, place it between the cracks of a plate or other piece of kitchenware, and bake it in an oven.
Naktursik T ^^
But milk needs human tears like epoxy glue...So you SHOULD cry over spilled milk :/
Haha, yeah
Now you need to make a carton of milk turn into a plate
No... stop.
Iq *6969*
Lmao
Just why?
UR HERE TOO
My goodness.
You have got to have one of the most interesting science/experiment shows here from milk made dinnerware to black holes !!
And you explain things so thoroughly.
Amazing.
Me: Uh mom i accidentally broke a plate
Mom: Oh shit let me get the milk
What a name
For the linguistics nerds out there: "casein" comes from the same origin as the word "cheese." It's more obvious if you compare it to the German "Käse" or the Spanish "queso."
That's actually interesting! In Dutch, a German like language cheese is called "kaas", it's also similar.
Yeah
@@dorian-o6sso..,,The language that came earlier wins
@@bhavay819 No, I don't think so :p
@@dorian-o6s WOW
Then I lost myself again at the quote, "...We can actually fish some science out of this stupid video..." 😂😂😂
Tho ur the 1one here will make more stupid videos
Even comments
@@voltrex5704 I wasn't calling the video stupid?
Read again
@@BobbytheBongoPlaya read again
I secretly hoped he would wrap a different plate in tape and go: "WOW IT ACTUALLY WORKS!"
Same... :)
l thought he would do that too
Like that time he fooled us for a second into thinking that a helium mattress was floating?
Should have used flex tape
In Russia the tape flex’s on you
@@FAIZ655 o u r tape
@@FAIZ655 Our Tea*
*Intensifies*
This was hilarious. Well done. I love your chuckle when taking off the tape and "discovering" it's not fixed.
"Sorry can't fix a broken plate"
Milk: Hold my milk.
😂
Wow, milk holding a milk?
Wow
Milk is a cannibal
Chill Chill milkception. Lol
Cannibalistic :o
Now you need to make milk out of a plate
Edit: thanks for the heart:) first time I’ve ever got one
YES
Where can I find organic, artisanal, fair trade plate milk?
Let the plate decompose, let grass grow, bring a cow to eat the grass, make her produce milk.
Bruh m
payton does yt bad thx
1:12:
"What's better to tape it with than the"
Me: FLEX TA...
"... Action Lab branded tape"
*Oh*
You actually had a point when you thought flex tape! James (aka the action lab) should be locked in a mental asylum!
He is a fast speaker u spoke 1/2 words and he spoke 4 words
showing off that custom tape. i see u
Bobs and vagana which ever will it be
@@zeropomegranates9976 what did you say? I don't understand
Why r u talking about this there’s kids on RUclips and don’t @ me
Got it deleted
@@alolanpikachu7330 It's from pewdiepie's "Bitch Lasagna" song. I don't understand the reason for the comment though.
"Hey man what are you up to?"
"Oh, not much... I'm just drinking milk out of milk..."
Note to people who came here hoping to find a solution for their broken ceramics: Boiling your mug or whatever in milk can work! At least for hairline cracks, which was the deal with me.
I put the mug in a pot on its side so the entire crack could be covered. I only filled the pot up enough so the crack was fully covered so I didn't waste more (whole) milk than I needed to. I put the heat on low and left it there for an hour. You could see the proteins kinda forming a bio-plastic film almost on the top as it heated. After an hour, I let it cool COMPLETELY then hand-washed it with cold water + Dawn the next day. Then I filled it up with water to check and like 90% of the crack was sealed, with water leaking only out of two specific spots. Since there was improvement, I planned to do it again later that day and set the mug aside. Later, while showing someone else, I filled it with water again and this time it was totally sealed, no leaks at all. I guess it needed more time to cure or whatever? This was almost a week ago and it's still going strong. The crack is definitely still visible, but it doesn't leak at all, so I'm satisfied. Only used it with cold drinks the first two days, then tried a hot drink and it still held up. Haven't put it through the dishwasher yet- I've just been hand-washing it with cold water to be safe after each use.
Just wanted to let y'all know to not lose hope just yet! Idk how a COMPLETELY broken ceramic would do but I'm curious to find out honestly.
ㅈㄹㄴ
Before the video starts: Oh come on what is this nonsense this time? He always does this!
After the video: *MIND. BLOWN.*
I just need to learn to trust you. There's always something interesting even in the most mundane- or absurd-seeming things. :D
Milk isn’t mundane
( • - •)
*MundaneMilk* thats ur channel name now *.*_*.*
i feel the same about this fucker, never know if is should even click lol
Feel ya. I've learned to just trust him and watch. I like how he doesn't react to stupid ideas at first. Oh this isn't gonna work etc. He lets us watch him do it and discover the answer together.
Yeah
Can you fix my marriage with milk?
Ouch...
SMH my head
Never cry over spilt milk.
You might try to make marriage with milk instead
I mean you can though
Instead of vinegar you might have used half lemon...
It's called Paneer & is favorite Indian food...
Yes
Action bhau ne lagta hai paneer door se hi dekha hai😂. Angrezon ke chochle i don't really mean it
@@parthchauhan5851 अगदी बरोबर बोललं।
च्याला इथे आमच्या वडा पाव आणि दोसा वर सुद्धा पनीर यायला लागलं आणि ह्यो याला हे नवल वाटलं।🤣🤣🤣
Oh, so that plate is an Indian food, ok.
@@dailyhealthmotivation7079 Ek pan dish aata paneer shivay rahile nahi. Saglya madhech paneer astach.
1980: in the future we will have flying cars!
2019: dRiNKinG mILk OuT oF MiLk
Lol
2020
דוד בועז דוביניו drinking milk out of milk out of milk
2020: melting starbursts (this won’t make sense unless you watch TKOR)
We've had flying cars since the 50's, maybe earlier. Nobody wanted them. (To fly a car, you need a pilot's license. We'll see where autonomous vehicles get us.)
Wearing a Nikola Tesla shirt on Edison’s birthday, nice.
._.
Lol😂
À shirt is a shirt... Who cares?
@@Crecross I guess you don't know the story between Edison and Tesla.. Edison was DC and Tesla was AC.
Since DC is not good for distances, guess who won out. It is a very high-brow way to stick it to Edison beyond the grave.
He can wear an Edison shirt on July 10th.
Think of it as a video with an Easter egg.
@@RealPackCat what's inside the Easter egg?
This dude reminds of my nerdiest friend in high school. Super intelligent, extremely competent in science, a funny sort of voice, boundless enthusiasm for anything interesting, and always smiling. He's a multi millionaire many times over today. Nerds always win.
I wonder if he actually waited 2 days to take the tape off or used common sense to know it wouldn’t work and just cut like 15 seconds to take the tape off
Jared Bryan chucked in an ew for effect so we think itd been there for two days
Jared Bryan ya I would say so because the milk would have a layer over the top of it and stuff. but of course he is going to make people think that he tried it or everyone in the comments is going to say how he didn’t try it.
hoi
Plus it suppose to be porcelain plate not any common plate
He had the same pants, just different shirts
Can you freeze bubbles ??
TKOR have.
yes you can
Like, you just have to search it on youtube, a bunch of videos out there about that. But then why are you wasting your time asking it here? I bet he won't travel to Siberia just to show you you can freeze bubbles
Yes u can
Yes
It would be interesting to see if he could use the casein to bond the plate back together.
So you are basically making a cup out of cheese right?
Paneer
He is basically microwaving paneer to make a plate..😑
you mean cottage cheese
@Evi1M4chine he knows a lot about science, not so much about cheese. Needs some renne in there.
But you can use that denatured milk as an adhesive to fix the plate!?!?
This. Seemed like an obvious thing to make a glue out of the denatured milk and fix the plate.
exactly what i thought after the video
That’s exactly what I was thinking!
9:01
When your plan is not working really well...
Hmm
😂😂
Me at 12 am: Just 1 one more video before I go to bed.
3 am:
Me right now
Its me...
Also there is 12 am
Lol, relatable
Same
You can purchase new one because milk is more expensive than plate
Unless you're Robinson Crusoe and you need a nice plate.
Well it may be useful when your milk turns bad.
But humans can't produce porcelain if you know what I mean
Dan Dan where are u getting ur plates for 10 cents u got a sick plate plug kid
Vishav My country (England)
Milk: depends where you get it from but where my mum gets it from it’s about £1
Plate: where my mum gets plates a cheap one is £5 and and expensive one is £10. Pack of them cost £20
This recipe is known to Indians since ages. This is called paneer except the last heating part. And instead of vinegar, we use some regular salt while heating the milk right in the beginning. That separates the proteins that you need.
Wow! Thanks for making this video, actually I had my 12th grade project on this topic. Milk contains coagulable and non-coagulable proteins and casein is the coagulable protein because it can coagulate when some acid or rennet tablets are added. The non-coagulable proteins are a-lactalbumin and b-lactoglubulin . These are found in the whey milk. In fact whey milk is same as butter milk. The presence of proteins can be detected using millons reagent!
You "had did"? English must not be your first language, because anyone who has finished the third grade would know that "had did" is not correct English.
@@DaveTexas oh please, not again!
Shut up nerd
Mad lads
guys i was just filling you all in with a little bit more information there is no need to be so angry about it
Nice, wearing the Tesla shirt for Edisons birthday.
You mean he's wearing the Tesla shirt for Discount Tesla's birthday?
Attribution is a splendid thing.
It was my birthday !
therapist: chunky milk isn't real, it can't hurt you.
chunk milk: 6:39
Haha
Milk is really usefull: you can make milkplates
Hahahahah
I want milk shoes! Can you dig it
@@italygristal9315 only if you use a milk shovel
@@italygristal9315 only if you use a milk shovel
Tangle 《 Gacha 》 did you watch the video
I like how in every video he already knows the outcome but just acts like he doesn't just to explain it after.
wow I was about to totally make fun of you for even entertaining the first experiment but that second demonstration was super impressive! I like how you used total fake social media junk to turn it into something really educational
Congratulations, you have achieved the minimum requirements to call that snack “cheese and crackers”
First you put the cereal in. Then you put the milk in. Then you put the spoon in. Finally comes the *_P L A T T E_*
I didn't get it.😐
Should I die?😅
You said first put the cereal in In what
@@AbdulMalik-ig3ty on the table
I SWEAR. I. Saw you on Grian's and mumbo jumbo's videos!
you put milk then cereal then you put the bowl
Three days ago, I watched this on acid and for real, what? I still don't get it.
Best science channel, because of the genuine personality of its creator.
Am I the only one thinks "is he going to make cheese?"?
😂😂😂
lol
No u not
What's better to use than -flex tape- the action lab tape?
-thought you would use flex tape-
He doesn't know the power of flex tape
Wierd flex but ok
@@MildSkywalker wierd spelling but ok
Same
ik but he dosent hace the power to
They use to paint barns with milk and iodine. :) Cool video Thanks.
Excellent video! Just something to note, in the cheese making process, it's not that they use bacteria (at least not primarily), but they use rennet, which is mainly obtained from animal source and it's an enzyme that denatures the proteins in a somewhat different manner, so it ends of more like a clot instead of very little strands, which is important when making cheese. There's now microbial rennet and other ways to do it, but that's was the way it used to be. Anyway, the important thing is that milk has been an important part in culture in many ways!!
Most cheese in the US is made with microbial rennet, has been produced for 20+ years.
@@rdizzy1 Note that it's not the same using microbial rennet than the fermenting process that bacteria and yeast make. Microbial rennet is almost the same than animal rennet in the same way than microbial insulin, as it's a byproduct which the bacteria makes, which is then extracted, and it's that extract what is used (an enzyme, so you don't use the organism itself for the process), unlike the fermenting process, where you use the actual organism
@@maxmustermann3938 Yeah, at the beginning it could've been that and then someone decided to use rennet (why, I don't know for sure). The difference is in the properties of the final product. A yeast or a bacteria will first ferment it and so the pH will be lower and that's what will cause the clot to form, but it's slower and using pH to form cheese you normally end up with small particles dispersed, as you can see in the video, and with a very different flavor too, due to acidity. When you use rennet, it forms a big clot, like a gelatin which, depending on what you want, you might prefer it over the other method, but yeah, you are right on that! Many good things resulted in what we know today as fine products due to very ehmm "dirty" environments.
I mean most US cheese (roughly 90%)is produced via non-animal rennet (main active chemical obviously in rennet) (FPC) that is all. @@smokeduv
@@rdizzy1 Oh, I see!! Great fact then! I didn't knew it was used that much. I thought the microbial one was not used that much, so maybe I think that animal rennet will be used only in small production for gourmet cheeses and the like. Thanks!
Me: what are u drinking
My friend: soy milk
Me: hola milk, soy Dora
Alm Tre it’s kinda funny, but only people that know spanish will understand
This comment is too good
lmfao
@@leos9267 Yo entender!
Yo tengo
I lost myself at the point where you started digging the plate out and went, "Ewwwww!" 😁😀😂😂😂😅😄😆
In india we call this Paneer(milk protein) and this is a food product but then also being so common no one ever think of making plates with it😂😂
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
*So Productive* 😂😂
So we can eat the plate in a caurry...... Plate curry in a plate 😂
@@MildSkywalker 😂😂😂😂
how do you eat it if its rock hard
@@BigOlSmellyFlashlight its very easy just bite it
Hey unsubscribe to t series
if i just listen to 9:21 without any context it just sounds like your descending into madness haha
Hey James,
since you're clearly capable of extracting milk from chicken, and then unboil its eggs, I have a task for you:
Can you extract pink dye from white t-shirts (you know as when you put them in the washing machine them together with something you though was black, but turned out to be really-dark-red for example, and then it dissolves just enough dye to make everything quite pink :) )
Great channel! I'm really enjoying it!
Can I fix my past using milk?
You use chlorox bleeeech
1:02 action lab created plate into windows logo 😂
Wow! After finishing watching this I think you should make a line of dishes to replace toxic plastics!! That would be so cool. If they end up in the ocean it won’t do the damage that our plastics do now
That would be a great idea!
Anybody else satisfied how the plate broke?
Sir you are a sociopath and Shane Dawson wants to know your location
The thumbnail looks like plate’s confirmed for smash.
Right..lol
No I skipped the smashing of the plate
Oh so satisfying.....god this is an annoying trend
You’re very good at explaining things. Can you please please make teaching videos like the khan academy where you teach the basics of chemistry because that would be helpful since I’m in chem now
His physics is good, but his chemistry is sometimes hit or miss. It makes sense because he's a physicist, not a chemist. I'm a chemistry tutor. I'm in the process of making videos on my other channel, but they aren't ready yet. However, I do recommend seeking out the channel called "The Organic Chemistry Tutor." His videos are made in a similar way as Khan Academy, but he goes through the effort of giving LOTS of examples and always works it out step by step so that you can pause the video, see if you get the same answer, and then learn why it was done differently if your answer was not correct. He doesn't just do organic chemistry. He does all chemistry, physics, and math! Tyler DeWitt does really good Chem I videos, also. He's very charismatic and not boring to watch. Good luck. Chemistry is loads of fun! :)
rainbowdust919 THANK YOU
Lol, I'm a PhD chemical engineer
The Action Lab and I oop
Title: Can You Fix a Broken Plate with Milk? The Milk Plastic Experiment
Me: oh no somebody oh! he need some milk!
And that's how we Indians make our favourite dishes paneer buttermasala,paneer kadai...etc
It's not a joke
The Action Lab breaks a plate:
*thats pretty good*
Me breaks a plate:
Oh sh1t oh sh1t, mom is gunna kill me.
Who cares about custom t shirts, he's got his own tape!
Let’s just count how many times he says MilK
Galaxy Angel ...... Melk
Malk
0... He says melk
Drinking game
Galaxy Angel Lol! Challenge accepted. He says “milk” or ‘melk’, lol, only 29 times. You’re welcome! Lol.
*Plate falls*
Me : Oh! He needs some *milk*
I'm sorry lmfao please forgive me xddddd
@@Suigeneris999 nah i already died drinking 2 liters of milk before i got to the death row
Ok ima sub lol xD
Hahahaha so funee joke xdddddddddddddddddddd
This accually funny
I wanna like but there's 69 likes and I don't wanna ruin it
Didn't need to see this to know two days in milk will fix nothing but thank you for helping inform those who don't know better
We drink this? Whoa! No wonder you had so much trouble with milk as a kid!
Wow! Whey cool! lol. Loved the milk plate and milk cup and drinking milk out of a milk cup! lf l ever run out of clean plates, l can make me a new one :) loved it!
@ThatDerpyGamer no l am not , l am Action Labs Mom
How did that milk smell after two days?! 🤢
Bad, ofc
Like milk after it's been left out for 2 days
These items are really valuable science. Thank you. I will be doing this experiment next homeschooling day.
You know what more crazy than making plate from milk?
Making milk from a plate.
There’s nothing more pleasurable in life than milking a plate.
Hmm, I wonder where you got that idea from.
Totally original idea.
There is no Whey that would work...
Make a milk out of milk
Devin SOME HOW I'LL MAKE A *MILK* OUT OF YOUUUUU
@@tkdace2459 oh my God yes
@@tkdace2459hollly shittttt😂😂😂😂
hahaha this isn't Pornhub
It would also be interesting to see what it would take to make the original concept work, even if it took a few more steps.
Hi there! I actually found something that worked for me. I'll paste my comment here:
"Note to people who came here hoping to find a solution for their broken ceramics: Boiling your mug or whatever in milk can work! At least for hairline cracks, which was the deal with me.
I put the mug in a pot on its side so the entire crack could be covered. I only filled the pot up enough so the crack was fully covered so I didn't waste more (whole) milk than I needed to. I put the heat on low and left it there for an hour. You could see the proteins kinda forming a bio-plastic film almost on the top as it heated. After an hour, I let it cool COMPLETELY then hand-washed it with cold water + Dawn the next day. Then I filled it up with water to check and like 90% of the crack was sealed, with water leaking only out of two specific spots. Since there was improvement, I planned to do it again later that day and set the mug aside. Later, while showing someone else, I filled it with water again and this time it was totally sealed, no leaks at all. I guess it needed more time to cure or whatever? This was almost a week ago and it's still going strong. The crack is definitely still visible, but it doesn't leak at all, so I'm satisfied. Only used it with cold drinks the first two days, then tried a hot drink and it still held up. Haven't put it through the dishwasher yet- I've just been hand-washing it with cold water to be safe after each use.
Just wanted to let y'all know to not lose hope just yet! Idk how a COMPLETELY broken ceramic would do but I'm curious to find out honestly."
7:30 Congratulations! Now you have some Ricotta! (Except it tastes awful made with vinegar 😂)
Yeah XD
I loved that: I'm going to tell my wife I fixed the plate, (walk to wife) I fixed the plate, now I'm going... 😂😂
This man would be a perfect lawyer
Collab with Vsause!
Wait....ain’t I forgetting something?
Yep. You forgot that he forgot his Vsause channel password 😂😂😂
@@TechSupportDave em?
HEY VSAUCE MICAL HEER
@@TechSupportDave wait for real?
Michael is now on another channel called DONG. Check it out its content is the same as Vsause.
leaving that milk there while talking was quite the power play
😂 I was thinking, “he basically just made cheese.” Then he says, “now you’ll notice this is similar to the cheese making process.”
A japanese youtuber made a sharp knife out of milk
I see you that you watch kiwami japan
latenightvibes. est 2015 i see you're a man of culture aswell.
Meanwhile he make knife from smoke
He makes knives out of a lot of things. Very interesting.
@@kamisa7362 Sherlock Holmes
4:58 - Alpha helices don’t form because of “electric charges on the molecules”. They are stabilised due to hydrogen bonds between amides along the peptide backbone.
6:00 - Also, adding acid won’t neutralise the structure (positively charged residues will remain positive when the protein is protonated further)
"Why is the milk gone?" "I built us a boat out of casein." "But why is the milk gone?"
I figured out a new way to fix a plate
Step 1: get a broken plate
Step 2: find some warm milk
Step 3: pour some vinegar in and wait 20 minutes
Step 4: then filter the milk so there is only this powder left
Step 5: apply the powder to the plate
Step 6: put it in the oven at warm heat for 6-12 hours
And you fixed your plate!
No one:
The action lab: hang on let me drink milk out of milk
1:46 *Ok, Good as new!!!*
TLC - We found our next cheapstake.
I like his dedication dude, hats off really enjoy watching your videos.
His determination for drinking milk with something made out of milk is simply awesome 💯💯
"I used the milk to hold the milk"
Mrs. Beeton's Book of Household Management (1861) has a recipe for a milk-based glue for repairing china that I always scoffed at. Now, thanks to you, I know the power of casein, I scoff no longer.
What if you used the way you made a plate out of milk to repair the cracks in the plate.
Whey* ... _Sorry, had to correct that!_
@@EzeePosseTV wanna revive a meme there buddy?
Yeahhh, oh yeah yeahhh ... Lol
Glad im not the only one who thought of this
Dani: ILL TAKE YOUR ENTIRE STOCK
fix a broken China? Am I hearing that right?
Okay, China plate. Thanks for the description.
Very nice 👍
What you made initially is called chhena(used to make to make desserts(mithai) in India), or cottage cheese.
If you strained it, you would get paneer AKA farmer cheese(a fresh cheese used to make delicious Indian vegetarian foods(basically curries)).
I never knew that it can get that hard.
ew cancer
@@tentifr OMG! which stage?😨
😂
I have that thing everyday for breakfast... A dried form of my food is that hard...
And if all else fails, Flex tape!
I just wanna say, the way you break down and rephrase concepts really helps me understand the topic. Are you a teacher?
Maybe he is
Yes. He is teaching you.
@@STST Har har.
You could have technically fixed plate with milk by using the denatured milk protein.
Yes but it wouldn’t be the original shape and visual aspect of the plate...which is the main objective.:.to return the plate to its original form
@Evi1M4chine I don't understand your point, did you reply to the wrong comment 😂 Did you mean not to confuse the chemicals with the original products or else you can get sick, if so, I didn't say if it was practical or safe.
@@topher10 Well at least it does something, even if it's not practical or beautiful :P but then again it would be better to put heat resistant food grade silicone, or some other heat proof adhesive.
Next: Can You Fix A Hammer With A Nail?
Depends on what part of the hammer is broken. If there is a small but like 1cm deep dent in the metal, then yes. if its the wood handle, then no.
khonsu thedragonhog 1 whole Centimeter?!?! Do you mean mm? (Millimeter)
khonsu thedragonhog if the head of a hammer falls then you can hit some nails from the top so the handle is thicker and head doesn’t fall off
Yes we can
If the head of the hammer comes out of the handle, we can wedge in a nail and fix the shaft to the handle
¯\_༼ •́ ͜ʖ •̀ ༽_/¯
Maybe, you can melt the nail and yeah
Most scientifically accurate information from facebook
In Austria we call this "Topfen" hahaha😂🇦🇹