- Source: Italian soda
An Italian soda is a soft drink made from carbonated water and flavored syrup. Flavors can be fruit (e.g. cherry, blueberry) or modeled after the flavors of desserts, spices, or other beverages (e.g. amaretto, chai, chocolate). Some vendors add cream to the drink as well, which is often then known as a French soda or an Italian cream soda.
Despite its name, Italian soda originated in the United States. One claimant to the introduction and increased popularity of Italian sodas is Torani: Rinaldo and Ezilda Torre brought recipes for flavored syrups from Lucca, Italy, and in 1925 introduced what became known as an Italian soda to the North Beach neighborhood of San Francisco, California. The Italian-American association with Italian sodas has been reinforced by various ready-made brands of Italian sodas, such as the 2005 creation of Romano's Italian Soda Company (named after the Italian-American grandfather of the company's founder) and the 2007 introduction of "The Sopranos Old Fashioned Italian Sodas" which come in three flavors: limoncello, amaretto, and Chianti.
See also
Affogato
Carbonated milk
Cream soda
Diabolo
Dirty soda
Doodh soda
Egg cream
Ice cream float
Milkis
Pilk
Seltzer
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Hidangan Italia
- Argentina
- Starbucks
- Dr. Stone
- Wide Awake (lagu Katy Perry)
- Isis
- James Gandolfini
- Ray Evans
- Mi goreng Tionghoa
- You're the One That I Want
- Italian soda
- Dirty soda
- Ice cream float
- Campari Soda
- Pilk
- Brio (soft drink)
- Spritz (cocktail)
- R. Torre & Company, Inc.
- Egg cream
- Diabolo (drink)