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  2. Buckley's - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buckley's

    Buckley's Original Mixture is a cough syrup invented in 1919 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, [citation needed] and still produced as of 2024.Noted for the strongly unpleasant taste referenced by the brand's slogan, its ingredients include ammonium carbonate, potassium bicarbonate, camphor, menthol, Canada balsam (Abies balsamea), sodium cyclamate, pine needle oil, and a tincture of capsicum. [3]

  3. Creosote - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creosote

    Creosote is the ingredient that gives liquid smoke its function; guaicol lends to the taste and the creosote oils help act as the preservative. Creosote can be destroyed by treatment with chlorine, either sodium hypochlorite, or calcium hypochlorite solutions. The phenol ring is essentially opened, and the molecule is then subject to normal ...

  4. Turpentine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turpentine

    Turpentine is composed of terpenes, primarily the monoterpenes alpha- and beta-pinene, with lesser amounts of carene, camphene, limonene, and terpinolene. [3] Substitutes include white spirit or other petroleum distillates – although the constituent chemicals are very different. [4]

  5. Pinus mugo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinus_mugo

    The mugo pine is used in cooking. The cones can be made into a syrup called "pinecone syrup", [15] "pine cone syrup", [16] or mugolio. Buds and young cones are harvested from the wild in the spring and left to dry in the sun over the summer and into autumn. The cones and buds gradually drip syrup, which is then boiled down to a concentrate and ...

  6. Hires Root Beer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hires_Root_Beer

    Hires Root Beer was created by Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, pharmacist Charles Elmer Hires. The official story is that Hires first tasted root beer, a traditional American beverage dating back to the colonial era, while on his honeymoon in 1875. [2] However, historical accounts vary and the actual time and place of the discovery may never be known.

  7. Birch beer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birch_beer

    In the dairy country of southeastern and central Pennsylvania, an ice cream soda made with vanilla ice cream and birch beer is called a "birch beer float", while chocolate ice cream and birch beer makes a "black cow". Alcoholic birch beer, in which the birch sap is fermented, has been known from at least the seventeenth century.

  8. WHO warns of falsified cough syrup ingredients seized ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/warns-falsified-cough-syrup...

    By Patrick Wingrove (Reuters) - The World Health Organization issued an alert on Monday warning drugmakers of five contaminated batches of propylene glycol, an ingredient used in medicinal syrups ...

  9. Indigenous cuisine of the Americas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigenous_cuisine_of_the...

    Maple syrup is another essential food staple of the Eastern Woodlands peoples. Tree sap is collected from sugar maple trees during the beginning of springtime when the nights are still cold. [15] Birch bark containers are used in the process of making maple syrup, maple cakes, maple sugar, and maple taffy.