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Best Soda & Ice Cream for a Float You Like to Make?
I prefer Diet Coke with Vanilla Ice Cream whenever I'm making mines. What's yours'?
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Diet Coke is fine, but in a float? That is some nasty shitt.
I prefer an Oatmeal Stout. Delicious, even with plain vanilla. |
Homemade root-beer and Bryers French Vanilla.
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Hmmmm. I haven't had one in years. Make that decades; but Vernors and vanilla ice cream. Oh. I may have to order some Vernors now. ;)
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Goose Island root beer and Ben & Jerrys vanilla ice cream.
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A good Vanilla ice cream (Ben & Jerry's is a possibility) and Young's Double Chocolate Stout.
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Originally Posted by GadgetFreak
(Post 15232407)
Vernors and vanilla ice cream.
The secret to making a float is to first put a tiny bit of soda in the bottom of a tall soda glass, add a tiny bit of ice cream, and mix thoroughly. Then add ice cream and soda. The soda will have a slightly enhanced ice cream flavor which is what you want. |
Originally Posted by mbstone
(Post 15298286)
This.
The secret to making a float is to first put a tiny bit of soda in the bottom of a tall soda glass, add a tiny bit of ice cream, and mix thoroughly. Then add ice cream and soda. The soda will have a slightly enhanced ice cream flavor which is what you want. |
Originally Posted by obscure2k
(Post 15311983)
That sounds so good. If you add Fox's U Bet, will you then have an Egg Cream?
Since seltzer is relatively hard to find, I will forgive you for using club soda. In our health-conscious age it is also OK to substitute whole or lowfat milk for A-cream. As to my recommendation that a small amount of ice cream should be briskly stirred into a small amount of soda when making an ice cream soda or float, a mixture of milk, club soda and U-Bet syrup should require little effort to mix. . |
Originally Posted by mbstone
(Post 15298286)
This.
The secret to making a float is to first put a tiny bit of soda in the bottom of a tall soda glass, add a tiny bit of ice cream, and mix thoroughly. Then add ice cream and soda. The soda will have a slightly enhanced ice cream flavor which is what you want. A Float: These days, Dr. Pepper and Blue Bell Homestyle Vanilla, not mix, just floated.** Long ago, XXX Root Beer (Draught) or maybe A&W, Vanilla Ice Cream floated in the mug. ** Best enjoyed at the soda fountain in the Dr. Pepper Museum, South 5th near IH35, in Waco, Texas, the birthplace of Dr. Pepper which claims to be the country's oldest "branded" soft drink. The museum also sells Dublin, TX bottled "Cane Sugar" Dr. Pepper in small bottles, a rare claret among everyday jug wines Then you get to the esoteric remedies like "Banana Egg Malt". |
Whatever they use to make Butter Beer in Harry Potter's Wizarding World in Orlando !
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I can't believe that "A cream" explanation - too contrived.
The best floats I've had: strawberry Coke (my late sister discovered this) vanilla A&W root beer. There used to be a place in Cambridge, Mass. that made vanilla red wine floats that were pretty good. |
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Originally Posted by TMOliver
Originally Posted by mbstone
(Post 15298286)
This.
The secret to making a float is to first put a tiny bit of soda in the bottom of a tall soda glass, add a tiny bit of ice cream, and mix thoroughly. Then add ice cream and soda. The soda will have a slightly enhanced ice cream flavor which is what you want. A Float: These days, Dr. Pepper and Blue Bell Homestyle Vanilla, not mix, just floated.** Long ago, XXX Root Beer (Draught) or maybe A&W, Vanilla Ice Cream floated in the mug. ** Best enjoyed at the soda fountain in the Dr. Pepper Museum, South 5th near IH35, in Waco, Texas, the birthplace of Dr. Pepper which claims to be the country's oldest "branded" soft drink. The museum also sells Dublin, TX bottled "Cane Sugar" Dr. Pepper in small bottles, a rare claret among everyday jug wines Then you get to the esoteric remedies like "Banana Egg Malt". |
Originally Posted by violist
(Post 15322110)
I can't believe that "A cream" explanation - too contrived.
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What I can't wrap my head around is anyone describing
the thing using the term "Grade A cream" in the first place. Too verbose and too convenient for guesswork etymologists. To me there's a bad odor about it, the same as with a "rarebit." |
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