Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Clamato / k l ə ˈ m ɑː t ə ʊ /, / k l ə ˈ m eɪ t ə ʊ /, / k l ə ˈ m æ t oʊ / is a commercial drink made of reconstituted tomato juice concentrate and sugar, which is flavored with spices, dried clam broth and MSG. [1] It is made by Mott's. The name is a portmanteau of clam and tomato. It is also referred to colloquially as ...
A Caesar cocktail prepared with Clamato juice. Clamato is a mass-produced beverage prepared with tomato juice concentrate, clam juice and spices. [18] [19] It also contains high fructose corn syrup, monosodium glutamate, salt and ascorbic acid. [19] Clamato is used as an ingredient in the Caesar cocktail. [20] The michelada, a beer cocktail, is ...
The main ingredients of a Bloody Caesar are tomato juice, clam broth and vodka. [3] Shortly thereafter, Duffy-Mott, an American juice manufacturer, began to produce and market a mixture of tomato juice, clam broth and spices under the name Clamato.
Here’s a list of some of the beverages recalled so far this year: Schweppes Zero Sugar Gingerale. PepsiCo’s Mug Root Beer. Martinelli’s Apple Juice. Natural Waters of Viti Limited’s Fiji Water
Tomato juice is the base for the cocktails Bloody Mary and Bloody Caesar, and the cocktail mixer Clamato. In the UK, tomato juice is commonly combined with Worcestershire sauce. In Germany, tomato juice is a base ingredient in the Mexikaner mixed shot. Chilled tomato juice was formerly popular as an appetizer at restaurants in the United States ...
First, place the soft and/or juice ingredients in the blender (we like the Breville Fresh & Furious Blender) and process until liquefied. Then, add the remaining ingredients; blend until liquefied. 3.
When choosing store-bought juice, Rizzo advises looking for products that say “100% juice” on the front and have a fruit or vegetable as the first ingredient — and preferably the only one.
An American child during World War II (1943) purchases a can of V8, handing the grocer his ration book.. V8 Vegetable Juice was developed by Frank Constable of Chicago, Illinois, who worked as a contractor for W.G. Peacock (1896–1948), the founder of the New England Products Company, which manufactured individual vegetable juices under the brand name Vege-min since 1933.