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What it certainly meant originally, like Latin posca, was vinegar-and-water, the regular beverage of the classical Roman army on bad days. Thus Aëtius gives, and Paul of Aegina repeats, a recipe for a "palatable and laxative phouska " which includes cumin , fennel seed, pennyroyal , celery seed, anise , thyme , scammony , and salt to be added ...
Switchel, switzel, swizzle, switchy, ginger-water, or haymaker's punch (of uncertain etymology, but possibly related to "sweet"), is a drink made from water mixed with vinegar and often seasoned with ginger. It is typically sweetened with molasses, although honey, sugar, brown sugar, or maple syrup may also be used. [1]
English sparging (or batch sparging) drains the wort completely from the mash, after which more water is added, held for a while at 76 °C (169 °F) and then drained again. The second draining can be used in making a lighter-bodied low-alcohol beer known as small beer, or can be added to the first draining. Some homebrewers use English sparging ...
Savory blueberry sauces can be prepared without a sweetener, [7] or with a small amount of sweetener, [1] [8] and additional ingredients used can include cider vinegar, chicken broth, lemon juice, salt, pepper and corn starch.
Blueberry smash (vodka, St. Germain elderflower liqueur, lemon rounds, lime rounds, blueberries, mint leaves) [38] Bourbon blackberry smash (bourbon, lime juice, mint leaves, blackberries, simple syrup, club soda) [ 39 ]
A blueberry tea is usually served in a brandy snifter, to concentrate and hold the alcohol fumes released by the tea's heat.Ingredients are typically [1]. 1 oz. Grand Marnier liqueur
The author of the aforesaid book also gives a recipe for blackberry ale. The English writer John Evelyn states in his Sylva (1670) that ale and beer brewed with the ripe berries of quickbeam (mountain-ash) is an incomparable drink. [8] Elizabeth Moxon gives a recipe for orange ale in her 1775 edition of English Housewifery.
[2] [3] Both LAB and AAB enter on the surface of barley and malt in beer fermentation and grapes in wine fermentation; LAB lowers the pH of the beer/wine while AAB takes the ethanol produced from the yeast and oxidizes it further into vinegar, resulting in a sour taste and smell. [2] [3] AAB are also responsible for the formation of the ...