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25 October, 03:10

I have milk that contains 1 percent fat and milk that contains 4 percent fat. a customer wants a double latte made with 1/3 of a pint of 2 percent milk. how much of each type of milk should i use?

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  1. 25 October, 03:32
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    You should use 2/9 of a pint of the 1% milk and 1/9 of a pint of the 4% milk.

    Let x be the amount of 1% milk used. 1% = 1/100 = 0.01; this gives us 0.01x to represent this.

    We know that we will use the 4% milk to make up the rest of the 1/3 pint; this gives us 0.04 (1/3-x).

    Together, they will make 1/3 pint of 2% milk, or 0.02 (1/3)

    This gives us the equation

    0.01x+0.04 (1/3-x) = 0.02 (1/3)

    Multiplying, we have

    0.01x+0.04/3-0.04x = 0.02/3

    We can multiply everything by 3 to eliminate the fractions:

    0.01x*3 + 0.04 - 0.04x*3 = 0.02

    0.03x + 0.04 - 0.12x = 0.02

    Combining like terms, we have

    -0.09x + 0.04 = 0.02

    Subtract 0.04 from both sides:

    -0.09x + 0.04 - 0.04 = 0.02 - 0.04

    -0.09x = - 0.02

    Divide both sides by - 0.09:

    -0.09x/-0.09 = - 0.02/-0.09

    This gives us x = 2/9, so we will use 2/9 of a pint of the 1% milk.

    1/3 - 2/9 = 3/9 - 2/9 = 1/9; we will use 1/9 of a pint of the 4% milk.
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