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Bosco ads often featured the "Bosco Chiller-Diller" concoction. [5] [6] Bosco TV and radio ads also featured the "Bosco Nova" song and dance, set to a bossa nova beat. [7] The company has branched out and makes other products, including candy bars bearing the brand name. [8] [9]
Since wine contains approximately 85% water, it can be mixed with concentrates like a drink mixer, fruit syrup, or squash concentrate. Typically includes 3–7% fruit juice is added to the wine to dilute the ABV, and this solution can be carbonated with a soda machine to make alcopop, after which soft drink syrup is added, which lowers the ABV ...
Coca-Cola [4] is America's iconic soft drink, with the name of the drink referring to two of its original ingredients: coca leaves and kola nuts (a source of caffeine). Bourbon (whiskey) , [ 5 ] named for Bourbon County, Kentucky, is a corn whiskey aged in charred oak barrels - and was proclaimed the U.S. National Spirit by an act of Congress ...
The earliest known usage of "pop" is from 1812; in a letter to his wife, poet Robert Southey says the drink is "called pop because pop goes the cork when it is drawn, & pop you would go off too if you drank too much of it." [5] The two words were later combined into "soda pop" in 1863.
A slushy (also spelled slushie and less commonly slushee) [1] is a type of beverage made of flavored ice and a drink, similar to granitas but with a more liquid composition. It is also commonly called a slush, slurpee, frozen beverage, or frozen drink.
In America, a small drink is 16 oz., a medium is 21 oz., and a large is 30 oz. Singapore and Canada just about measure up, while cups in Hong Kong, Australia, India -- and basically every other ...
Nesquik is a brand of food products made by Swiss company Nestlé.In 1948, Nestlé launched a drink mix for chocolate-flavored milk called Nestlé Quik in the United States; this was released in Europe during the 1950s as Nesquik.
It is essentially the same cocktail as the Sazerac, but called for bourbon (and not rye) instead of cognac. [22] Later versions of the drink were spelled Zazarac and added rum, and are thought by some to be a variant of the Sazerac, [23] although it might have originated completely independently of the more famous drink. [24]