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“White wine has an average of 1.4 grams of sugar per 5-ounce serving, so this drink would only contain around 4.5 grams of sugar using four watermelon balls and no added sugar.” Summer Limeade ...
A Cape Cod is made with vodka and cranberry juice, and may be garnished with a lime wedge. Proportions vary, with sources giving a recommended vodka-to-juice ratio of 1/4, [2] [3] 1/3.7, [4] 1/2 [5] [6] and 1/1.5, [7] while other sources do not recommend precise proportions.
A 250 ml can Red Bull (60 mg caffeine in average), 2 oz vodka (40%) Irish coffee: Coffee: 80 mg 48 mg 9.7% 8 cl (4 parts) hot coffee (average 80 mg caffeine), 3 cl (1 + 1 ⁄ 2 parts) fresh cream, 1 tsp brown sugar, 4 cl (2 parts) Irish whiskey (40% (legal definition)) Gunfire: Black tea: 41 mg 35 mg 6% 1 cup of black tea (mean 35 mg caffeine ...
However, a larger 35 ml (1.2 US fl oz) measure is increasingly used (and in particular is standard in Northern Ireland [37]), which contains 1.4 units of alcohol at 40% ABV. Sellers of spirits by the glass must state the capacity of their standard measure in ml. In Australia, a 30 ml (1.0 US fl oz) shot of spirits (40% ABV) is 0.95 standard drinks.
Finlandia vodka is distributed in 135 countries and is widely associated with Finland on the international market. Flavors include cranberry (since 1994), lime (1999), mango (2004), red berry (2004), wild berries (2005), grapefruit (2006), tangerine (2009), and blackcurrant (2009).
In New Zealand, Vodka Cruisers are also available in a 7% alcohol, premium formulation sold in cardboard packages containing 12 cans of 250 ml each. According to the package labelling, each can has an alcohol content equivalent to 1.6 standard drinks, though the New Zealand definition of a standard drink would place one can at 1.75 standard drinks.
Cecchini and Huffsmith-Roth's Cosmopolitan includes 2 oz Absolut Citron vodka, 1 oz Cointreau, 1 oz lime juice, and .5 oz cranberry juice. [15] Other sources give Cecchini sole credit for the contemporary drink's invention.
Liquor may be consumed on its own (i.e. "neat"), typically in amounts of around 50 millilitres (1.7 US fluid ounces) per served drink; or frequently mixed with other ingredients to form a cocktail. In an undiluted form, distilled beverages are often slightly sweet and bitter and typically impart a burning mouthfeel with an odor derived from the ...