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B-52 (and related B-50 series cocktails) B & B (brandy and Bénédictine) Baby Guinness; Bacardi cocktail; Backdraft (also a pepperdraft variation) Batida (traditionally made with cachaça) Bay breeze; Bee's knees
This is the name of the mixed drink, cocktail garnish, or drinkware to which you are adding the infobox. If you are tagging an IBA Official Cocktail, you should always name the infobox with the exact IBA Official Cocktail name.
A tonic cocktail is a cocktail that contains tonic syrup or tonic water. Tonic water is usually combined with gin for a gin and tonic, or mixed with vodka. However, it can also be used in cocktails with cognac, cynar, Lillet Blanc or Lillet Rosé, rum, tequila, or white port. [103] Albra (vodka, cynar, mint syrup, lemon juice, tonic water) [104]
At wedding receptions and events, a signature drink in lieu of offering an entire bar, thus saving money. The drink reflects the wedding party's tastes. Wedding companies assist couples with the formulation of signature drinks. [5] [6] Many liquor companies are coming out with all sorts of versions of flavored spirits.
Name for two different mixed drinks, one being more of a standard cocktail associated with World War II and the other being more of an exotic drink associated with Tiki bars. Three Dots and a Dash Made with Martinique rum, blended aged rum, Falernum, allspice dram, honey syrup, fresh lime juice, fresh orange juice, and Angostura bitters. [59 ...
The cocktail may have been invented by a bartender at Chasen's, a restaurant in West Hollywood, California, to serve then-child actress Shirley Temple. However, other claims to its origin have been made. [8] Temple herself was not a fan of the drink, as she told Scott Simon in an NPR interview in 1986: The saccharine sweet, icky drink?
Beverage: Source: Date of first mention: Description and significance: Moloko Plus (Nadsat for "Milk Plus") : A Clockwork Orange: 1962: Aka "milk with knives in it"; drunk by the protagonist to get him in the mood for "a bit of the old ultraviolence" [2] In the film, Moloko Plus is milk laced with one of three (possibly illegal) drugs, Vellocet, Synthemesc and Drencrom.
Fuentealta after the springs of the same name in Teide National Park, Tenerife, Canary Islands; Gerolsteiner Brunnen from Gerolstein in the Eifel mountains, western Germany; Iceland Pure Spring Water and Icelandic Glacial — Iceland; Londonderry Lithia after the town of Londonderry, New Hampshire, USA; Malvern Water after the Malvern Hills ...