Hello parents, teachers and students! Sarah will be back in classrooms in the fall, but this summer theyâre at the San Antonio Zoo. Todayâs experiment will allow your kiddos to enjoy an icy treat and learn about states of matter!
Be sure to check out GMSA@9 on Wednesdays when Meteorologist Sarah Spivey does the demonstrations and explains the science behind it.
HEREâS WHAT YOUâLL NEED
A gallon ziplock baggie
A quart ziplock baggie
1 cup apple juice
1 cup water
1 cup salt
2 cups ice
Food dye
Oven mitts
DO THE EXPERIMENT
Put the cup of apple juice in the quart ziplock baggie and add a couple drops of food dye. Try to suck out as much air as possible and seal the bag. Temporarily set it aside
Add 1 cup of water with 1 cup of salt to the gallon ziplock and then add ice
Place the smaller ziplock filled with juice into the larger ziplock
With your oven mitts on, shake the bags for a few minutes until the apple juice mixture becomes a slushie
Take the slushie bag out and quickly rinse it with cold water
Open the bag and enjoy!!
HOW IT WORKS
Salt water has a lower freezing point than juice! That means the salt water around the juice can get really, really cold while the juice freezes and forms a delicious slushie!
SCIENCE WITH SARAH
If youâd like Sarah to come to your school and conduct a science experiment live on KSAT, fill out this form. âWinnersâ are selected at random.
Sarah Spivey is a San Antonio native who grew up watching KSAT. She has been a proud member of the KSAT Weather Authority Team since 2017.
Sarah is a Clark High School and Texas A&M University graduate. She previously worked at KTEN News.
When Sarah is not busy forecasting, she enjoys hanging out with her husband and cat, and playing music.