Ice Cube Calculator
Estimate cubes, trays, and melt-safe ice for drinks, coolers, and party service.
| Cube type | Volume | Best use | Melt pace |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard | 28 ml | Everyday | Medium |
| Large | 45 ml | Rocks | Slow |
| Pebble | 12 ml | Soda | Fast |
| Crushed | 10 ml | Coolers | Very fast |
| Block | 90 ml | Ice chest | Very slow |
| Sphere | 60 ml | Spirits | Slow |
| Mini cube | 8 ml | Blended | Fast |
| Shaved | 6 ml | Snow style | Fastest |
| Drink | Served ml | Ice style | Fill share |
|---|---|---|---|
| Water | 250 ml | Standard | 25% |
| Soda | 330 ml | Pebble | 30% |
| Cocktail | 180 ml | Large | 40% |
| Pitcher | 1000 ml | Standard | 35% |
| Wine | 150 ml | Large | 45% |
| Tea | 300 ml | Crushed | 20% |
| Juice | 240 ml | Standard | 28% |
| Mocktail | 220 ml | Pebble | 32% |
| Cooler size | Volume | Use | Hold time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small | 8 L | Lunch | 1-2 hr |
| Medium | 18 L | Party | 2-4 hr |
| Large | 24 L | BBQ | 4-6 hr |
| X-Large | 50 L | Event | 6+ hr |
| Drink tub | 12 L | Backyard | 2-3 hr |
| Ice chest | 32 L | Camping | 5+ hr |
| Marine box | 42 L | Travel | 6+ hr |
| Galley bin | 60 L | Large run | 8+ hr |
| Time | Buffer | Ice note | Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| 30 min | 8% | Short | Light prep |
| 60 min | 10% | Normal | Add margin |
| 120 min | 15% | Warm | Use extra |
| 180 min | 20% | Long | Pack deep |
| 240 min | 25% | Very long | Restock |
| Overnight | 30% | Extended | Double up |
| Lunch | 5% | Brief | Light load |
| Weekend | 18% | Mixed | Plan spare |
Large cubes chill well with low dilution.
Pebble ice fills fast and cools quickly.
Standard cubes help batch service stay steady.
Crushed ice packs tightly for travel and events.
Ice cubes are some of those basic kitchen items that you use in more ways than most notice. They come in a variety of sizes, shapes and materials, so you can use them for more than only ice. Full ice cubes give a clean look and cool maximum, because they melt slowly because of their size, which saves ice amount.
They work best for bagging and dispensing ice, as well as for sweet or mixed drinks
How to Use Ice Cubes in the Kitchen
Small cubes melt more quickly than a whole handful, so if you care about too watery drinks, indeed add more ice, even if it seems counterintuitive. Every usual cube weighs around 7 grams, which helps keep the taste in balance without too fast dilution because of excess thaw.
If ice cubes in a drink already work well, flavored cubes are even better. Float in them orange juice, lemon or even coffee like adding popsicles. You can pour soda in an ice tray and freeze it.
Like this the drink stays cold without getting diluted. Soda freezes more slowly than water, because of sugars that slow the process.
For bread baking, ice cubes genuinely alter the game. In a Dutch oven with the dough you lay them, to reach bright crusts. The method works best if the pot is preheated, because when cubes touch the warm surface, steam immediately exists.
Use one to four cubes according to size, to avoid too much moisture. Such adding matters for oven spring, although it depends on the recipe and dough-humidity.
Ice cubes are usefull also for cooking stocks. Some kitchens add them with water during broth making. After six to eight hours of boiling bones, you fill the pot with cubes.
Blanching tomatoes works too, putting them in a bowl with ice helps to easily remove the skin, to later mix in sauce for puree. Cold temperatures keep cucumbers crisp, so in a colander with cut cucumbers, some cubes and a bit of salt work well.
Herbs like basil, oregano, cilantro, thyme and rosemary go in ice trays with water or olive oil. Wine, broth, lemon juice and herb pastes can freeze here too. Baby food prepare in batches in such trays.
Soups or juices simply freeze in the liquid. A burger patty forms around a little cube, this gives water during cooking, what adds juiciness to the dish.