Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The word shrub can also refer to a cocktail or soft drink that was popular during America's colonial era, made by mixing a vinegared syrup with spirits, water, or carbonated water. [1] [4] [5] The term can also be applied to the base, a sweetened vinegar-based syrup from which the cocktail is made; that syrup is also known as drinking vinegar.
Alabama Slammer – a cocktail made with amaretto, Southern Comfort, sloe gin, and orange juice, served in a Collins glass; Ale-8-One – made in Winchester, Kentucky; Barq's Root Beer – first made in Biloxi, Mississippi; Big Red – cream soda originally from Waco, Texas; Blenheim Ginger Ale; Bourbon – made in central Kentucky; Brownie ...
The Fine Art of Mixing Drinks is a book about cocktails by David A. Embury, first published in 1948. [1] The book is noteworthy for its witty, highly opinionated and conversational tone, [2] as well as its categorization of cocktails into two main types: aromatic and sour; its categorization of ingredients into three categories: the base, modifying agents, and special flavorings and coloring ...
A hot toddy Information board highlighting the hot toddy at Ye Olde Red Cow pub in London. A hot toddy, also known as hot whiskey in Ireland, [1] [2] and occasionally called southern cough syrup [3] within the Southern United States, is typically a mixed drink made of liquor and water with honey (or in some recipes, sugar), lemon, and spices, and served hot. [4]
A dessert made from mashed kalo corms, grated coconut meat or coconut milk, and sugar [136] Lane cake: South Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi [137] Also known as a prize cake; a bourbon-soaked layer cake [138] Lemon stick: Northeast Baltimore, Maryland Half of a lemon with a peppermint stick in it [139] Mississippi mud pie: South Mississippi
The pies are light, made with natural ingredients, and often sell out since they’re only sold fresh. ... Mississippi: Mud Pie. ... Italian ice is known as water ice and is a summer staple made ...
A borg's high alcohol content and convenient packaging facilitates binge drinking, with a typical recipe calling for a fifth of vodka, equivalent to about 16 drinks. [1] The drink has been touted as a hangover remedy and a harm reduction strategy, supposedly counteracting the effects of alcohol with water and electrolytes, but these claims are ...
Switchel, switzel, swizzle, switchy, ginger-water, or haymaker's punch (of uncertain etymology, but possibly related to "sweet"), is a drink made from water mixed with vinegar and often seasoned with ginger. It is typically sweetened with molasses, although honey, sugar, brown sugar, or maple syrup may also be used. [1]