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A michelada (Spanish pronunciation: [mitʃeˈlaða] [1]) is a Mexican drink made with beer, lime juice, assorted sauces (often chili-based), spices, and chili peppers. It is served in a chilled, salt-rimmed glass. There are numerous variations of this beverage throughout Mexico. [2] [3]
Clamato is also added to beer in various beer cocktails, such as the michelada; the most basic is known as a "beer 'n clam", "Clam Eye", or "Red Eye" in Western Canada, which adds Clamato to pale lagers. In 2001, Anheuser-Busch and Cadbury-Schweppes introduced a premixed version called the "Budweiser and Clamato Chelada" in the United States. [14]
A Michelada con clamato is a cerveza preparada that is popular in Mexican restaurants both as a drink and as an appetizer if it is served with a garnish. It is made with tomato juice, Clamato, or V8 Vegetable Juice mixed with beer and seasoned with hot sauce (e.g., Tabasco, Tapatio, or Búfalo).
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 ...
Madrí has been marketed as a Spanish beer, but its links to Madrid are tenuous at best. ‘Spanish’ beer Madrí—brewed entirely in the U.K. and owned by $10.6 billion giant Molson Coors ...
In Mexico, beer is commonly served with lime juice. [citation needed] A beer cocktail called a michelada consists of light beer with lime juice, salt, and sometimes chili powder, Worcestershire sauce, soy sauce or tomato juice. As with a margarita, the salt is generally placed on the rim of glass. A less common version of the drink adds Clamato ...
Vodka is occasionally replaced with gin, tequila or rum, though the Clamato may not be substituted. [15] A variant that replaces vodka with beer is commonly called a "Red Eye" [21] or a "Clam Eye", one with Vodka and a beer bottle on top is a "Bloody MooseHead", [31] and one without alcohol is a "Virgin Caesar". [32]
This audio plug-in, which allows a person to transform their voice into another person's voice, makes it appear as though Lee was back in the recording booth at age 13 singing the song in Spanish.