This is the answer i got.
My hypothesis is that the water was going to melt at 25-degrees Celsius and boil at 100-degrees Celsius. It turns out that my hypothesis was almost correct, the ice actually melted a little sooner. It melted at 20-degrees Celsius. So my hypothesis was incorrect.
Latent heat is changing phase, and when a change in phase is accomplished at constant pressure temperature is constant. On the phase diagram, latent heat shows up as a "thermal plateau" where the graph is a flat line for a brief portion. The melting point of the ice was about 20-25 degrees celsius when it started turning into water, and at 100 degrees celsius when it started boiling. I could tell because the ice turned into water and the water got very hot.
The practical applications for this procedure were, ice,a pot,and a stove.