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The Cojito is a sweet cocktail made with lime and mint, and typically rum and coconut.It is a variant of the mojito, but typically adds coconut flavor.This can be done by adding coconut milk or coconut-flavored liqueurs, or by using coconut-flavored rum such as Blue Chair Bay, Cruzan coconut, or Malibu.
In the Arab world it is called “limon na-naa”. In Israel, it is called limonana, a portmanteau of limon Hebrew: לימון 'lemon' and naʿnaʿ Hebrew: נענע 'mint'. [20] [21] The word was coined for an advertising campaign to promote bus advertising, in which various celebrities were shown promoting a drink called "Limonana", a blend of lemon and mint, which was in the end revealed to ...
Egyptian mint tea. Tea (شاى, shay) is the national drink in Egypt, followed only distantly by coffee. Egyptian tea is uniformly black and sour and is generally served in a glass, sometimes with milk. Tea packed and sold in Egypt is almost exclusively imported from Kenya and Sri Lanka. Egyptian tea comes in two varieties, Koshary and sa‘idi.
The O.G. mint julep was likely made with cognac or brandy, but once France’s cognac trade slowed in the mid-1800s due to the phylloxera epidemic (aka when a particular aphid insect destroyed a ...
Lemon ice box pie – dessert consisting of lemon juice, eggs, and condensed milk in a pie crust, [5] [6] frequently made of graham crackers and butter. [ 7 ] Lemon meringue pie – baked pie, usually served for dessert, made with a crust usually made of shortcrust pastry, lemon custard filling and a fluffy meringue topping.
Sobia (Arabic: سوبيا) is a cool drink, which is mostly known in the Hejaz, Saudi Arabia mainly during the holy month of Ramadan. In Hijaz, Saudi Arabia, the Sobia is usually made of bread, barley or oats, while in Egypt the drink is produced from rice, coconut powder and dairy products. The drink is widely produced in and consumed during ...
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The diabolo drink appeared before 1920, [3] and became popular in France in the 1920s. The drink was around that time described as a mixture of a lemon soda and a 'very light tincture of liqueur', [4] a lemonade and a cassis liquor, [5] or a lemon-lime soda and a syrup.