putting a fork or pointed piece of metal in a microwave is dangerous, something with smoothed edges like a spoon just gets hot, and may give a static shock when you reach for it.
>>#12 As the spoon was shook the ice cream came un-stuck from all of the spoon but the bottom edge. The force put on the ice cream by the spoon was off-center from the center of gravity of the ice cream, creating a rotating force. The last upstroke caused the ice cream to swing around the bottom edge of the spoon until it broke free, then its inertia carried it onto the table.
You must be an engineering major or at least a physics major, there's no way you're so enthusiastic about drawing a free body diagram of ice cream flinging off a spoon
This somehow reminded me of my sister who we nicknamed "Icecream stuffer" because she would take a bowl, And fill every single PART of the bowl, pushing it down with a spoon until her entire bowl was completely full. Icecream also gave her the farts. Thank god she had already moved out but nothing made me madder when she came to visit and half the ******* icecream bucket was gone.
How about using your finger to just push it off the spoon? Look at all that excess flowing over the edge. One nice poke would be enough to knock it off.