I am experienced in both knitting and crochet and was wondering which uses up more yarn.
you are able to quite use a blender to coach the custard and combine it consisting of your well-known fruitand you are going to be able to make icecream and sorbet even without an ice cream maker, what you are going to be able to desire to do is place your cream in a container with lid (e.gclick clack plastic bins are fairly good), and go away it in a freezer, yet might desire to you should stir it many times each and every hour or so till it is thickened.
you have to put ice in a big ziplock bag and put salt on it to help it melt a little and shake it toothen but milk, vanilla, and suger in a smaller bag like a ziplock bag and shake it and it should be a little waterythen put the milk and stuff in the ice bag and close both of them and keep shaking it and the milk and stuff should get thick like ice creami tried and it worked pretty good.
get a ice cream maker machine.
get some vanilla flavoring, some ice, a ice cream machine or a bucket and a big spoon, milk, condensed milk, and some rock saltok now put the milk in and the condensed milk into the bucket keep ice packed around it with rock salt to keep it from melting and start stirring it have the vanilla flavoring in with the milkand stir till its thick
If you compare a single knit stitch to a single crochet stitch using tools (knitting needles vs crochet hook) of the same metric size you will note that the knit stitch looks like an upside down cursive U, and that the crochet stitch looks similar to a (reversed) small cursive A (depending upon right or left handed crocheting)You will see that the knit stitch is open ended whereas the crochet stitch is closed; this is what allows the crocheter to remove the hook from the work without the panic of lost stitches that knitters would experience if they removed their needles from their workIt is because the crochet stitch is closed (usually) prior to moving onto another stitch, similar to creating knots, that it requires more fiber to create each stitchIt is this extra bit of fiber used with each stitch created that causes crocheters to use more fiber overall for their projectsThe general rule of thumb is that crochet uses about 1/3 more yarnI hope this helps~Dee Stanziano CYCA Certified Crochet Teacher