FabulousFusionFood's Drinks Recipes 3rd Page
Six common hot and cold beverages.
Welcome to FabulousFusionFood's Drinks Recipes Page — A drink or beverage is a liquid intended for human consumption. In addition to their basic function of satisfying thirst, drinks play important roles in human culture. Common types of drinks include plain drinking water, milk, juice, smoothies and soft drinks. Traditionally warm beverages include coffee, tea, and hot chocolate. Caffeinated drinks that contain the stimulant caffeine have a long history.
Water is the world's most consumed drink, however, 97% of water on Earth is non-potable salt water.[28] Fresh water is found in rivers, lakes, wetlands, groundwater, and frozen glaciers. Less than 1% of the Earth's fresh water supplies are accessible through surface water and underground sources which are cost effective to retrieve. In western cultures, water is often drunk cold. In the Chinese culture, it is typically drunk hot. Water is the chief constituent in all drinks, and the primary ingredient in most. Water is purified prior to drinking. Methods for purification include filtration and the addition of chemicals, such as chlorination. The importance of purified water is highlighted by the World Health Organization, who point out 94% of deaths from diarrhoea – the third biggest cause of infectious death worldwide at 1.8 million annually – could be prevented by improving the quality of the victim's environment, particularly safe water. Before the advent of modern purification processes, boiling was the typical method of sterilizing water and this explains the advent of drinks such as tea an beer.
Milk is regarded as one of the "original" drinks;[32] milk is the primary source of nutrition for babies. In many cultures of the world, especially the Western world, humans continue to consume dairy milk beyond infancy, using the milk of other animals (especially cattle, goats and sheep) as a drink.
In the modern world, carbonated drinks which have carbon dioxide dissolved into them are a major commercial drink. Though drinks carbonated through the action of yeast (think ginger beer). the first commercially available artificially carbonated drink is believed to have been produced by Thomas Henry in the late 1770s.
Tea, the second most consumed drink in the world, is produced from infusing dried leaves of the Camellia sinensis shrub, in boiling water.[44] There are many ways in which tea is prepared for consumption: lemon or milk and sugar are among the most common additives worldwide. Other additions include butter and salt in Bhutan, Nepal, and Tibet; bubble tea in Taiwan; fresh ginger in Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore; mint in North Africa and Senegal; cardamom in Central Asia; rum to make Jagertee in Central Europe; and coffee to make yuanyang in Hong Kong. Tea is also served differently from country to country: in China, Japan and South Korea tiny cups are used to serve tea; in Thailand and the United States tea is often served cold (as "iced tea") or with a lot of sweetener; Indians boil tea with milk and a blend of spices as masala chai; tea is brewed with a samovar in Iran, Kashmir, Russia and Turkey; and in the Australian Outback it is traditionally brewed in a billycan.[45] Tea leaves can be processed in different ways resulting in a drink which appears and tastes different. Chinese yellow and green tea are steamed, roasted and dried; Oolong tea is semi-oxidised and appears green-black and black teas are fully oxidised Coffee is a brewed drink prepared from the roasted seeds of several species of an evergreen shrub of the genus Coffea. The two most common sources of coffee beans are the highly regarded Coffea arabica, and the "robusta" form of the hardier Coffea canephora. Coffee plants are cultivated in more than 70 countries. Once ripe, coffee "berries" are picked, processed, and dried to yield the seeds inside. The seeds are then roasted to varying degrees, depending on the desired flavour, before being ground and brewed to create coffee. Around the world, people refer to other herbal infusions as "teas"; it is also argued that these were popular long before the Camellia sinensis shrub was used for tea making. Leaves, flowers, roots or bark can be used to make a herbal infusion and can be bought fresh, dried or powdered. Fruit juice is a natural product that contains few or no additives. Citrus products such as orange juice and tangerine juice are familiar breakfast drinks, while grapefruit juice, pineapple, apple, grape, lime, and lemon juice are also common. Coconut water is a highly nutritious and refreshing juice. Many kinds of berries are crushed; their juices are mixed with water and sometimes sweetened. Raspberry, blackberry and currants are popular juices drinks but the percentage of water also determines their nutritive value. Grape juice allowed to ferment produces wine.
The alphabetical list of all the drinks recipes on this site follows, (limited to 100 recipes per page). There are 300 recipes in total:
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| Prekese Drink (Soup Perfume Bean Drink) Origin: Ghana | Serrated Wrack Tea Origin: Canada | Teh Halia (Milky Ginger Tea) Origin: Singapore |
| Primrose Tartlets Origin: Britain | Shaah Origin: Djibouti | Tej Origin: Ethiopia |
| Primrose Tisane Origin: Britain | Shaah (Somalian Tea) Origin: Somalia | Tereré (Iced Yerba Mate) Origin: Paraguay |
| Punch à la Vanille (Vanilla Punch) Origin: Madagascar | Shaah Origin: Somalia | Tiger-Nut Juice Origin: Ghana |
| Punch Coco (Coconut Punch) Origin: Comoros | Shamrock Shakes Origin: American | To make an excellent aromaticall Hyppocras Origin: Britain |
| Pur Fayte Ypocras (To Make Hippocras) Origin: England | Sharaab el toot (Mulberry Syrup) Origin: Lebanon | Trini Ginger Beer Origin: Trinidad |
| Qamar-el-Deen (Apricot Leather Drink) Origin: Egypt | Sharbat Gulab (Rose Petal Sharbat) Origin: India | Trinidad Mauby Origin: Trinidad |
| Qatiq (Fermented Milk Drink) Origin: Tajikistan | Shikanji (Indian Lemonade) Origin: India | Turmeric Teh Halia Origin: British |
| Qatiq (Fermented Milk Drink) Origin: Azerbaijan | Shirley Temple Cocktail Origin: Non-alcoholic | Vermouth di Torino (Turin Vermouth) Origin: Italy |
| Qatiq (Fermented Milk Drink) Origin: Russia | Sierra Leonean Ginger Beer Origin: Sierra Leone | Victorian Mallie Malai Origin: Anglo-Indian |
| Qatiq (Fermented Milk Drink) Origin: Uzbekistan | Sirop de Menthe (Mint Syrup) Origin: France | Vinum Murteum (Myrtle Wine) Origin: Roman |
| Qatiq (Fermented Milk Drink) Origin: Afghanistan | Sirop de Menthe au Lait (Mint Syrup with Milk) Origin: Gabon | Virgin Bull Cocktail Origin: Non-alcoholic |
| Qatiq (Fermented Milk Drink) Origin: Kazakhstan | Slime Smoothie Origin: American | Virgin Eggnog Origin: Britain |
| Qatiq (Fermented Milk Drink) Origin: Iran | Sloe Gin Origin: Britain | Virgin Mary Cocktail Origin: Non-alcoholic |
| Rabdi (Rajasthani Pearl Millet Drink) Origin: India | Sloe Gin Royale Cocktail Origin: Traditional Cocktail | Vodka Mimosa Cocktail Origin: Traditional Cocktail |
| Rainbow Sherbet Punch Origin: American | Sloe Syrup Origin: Britain | Waldmeister Bowle Origin: Germany |
| Raparperi ja Spruce Vihje juoma (Rhubarb and Spruce Tip Drink) Origin: Finland | Smothie à l'avocat (Avocado Smoothie) Origin: Mauritania | Wassail Origin: Britain |
| Redbush Tea Origin: Botswana | Soft Sangria Origin: Non-alcoholic | Watermelon Otai Origin: Fiji |
| Rhodomeli (Rose Honey) Origin: Roman | Sorrel Drink Origin: Bahamas | Watermelon Otai Origin: Samoa |
| Rhubarb Cordial Origin: British | Spiced Buttermilk Origin: India | Watermelon Otai Origin: Tonga |
| Rhubarb Lemonade Origin: Britain | Spruce Tip Tea Origin: Britain | Watermelon Otai Origin: Hawaii |
| Rich Scottish Chocolate Cake Origin: Scotland | Staghorn Sumac Lemonade Origin: America | Watermelon Otai Origin: New Zealand |
| Rooh Afza (Rose Water Tonic) Origin: India | Strawberry Blueberry Smoothie Origin: American | White Sangria Origin: Spain |
| Rosatum et Violacium (Rose Wine and Violet Wine) Origin: Roman | Strawberry Smoothie Origin: American | Wild Violet Flower Lemonade Origin: Britain |
| Rosatum Siue Rosa Sic Facies (Rose wine, made without roses) Origin: Roman | Sucan Gwyn (White Sowans) Origin: Welsh | Wisteria Beer Origin: America |
| Rose-hip Syrup Origin: Britain | Sudanese Cinnamon Tea Origin: Sudan | Wisteria Cordial Origin: Britain |
| Ruggata (Almond Barley Water Cordial) Origin: Malta | Sudd Danadl Poethion (Nettle Juice) Origin: Welsh | Yarrow Tea Origin: Britain |
| Rupjmaizes Kārtojums (Latvian Layered Rye Bread Dessert) Origin: Latvia | Suja (Butter Tea) Origin: Bhutan | Yerba Mate Origin: Paraguay |
| Saint Helena Ginger Beer Origin: St Helena | Sumo de Cabaceira (Baobab Fruit Juice) Origin: Guinea-Bissau | Yerba Mate Origin: Uruguay |
| Sangría Especial (Special Sangria) Origin: Spain | Sweet Lassi Origin: India | Yoghurt Sharbat Origin: India |
| Sangria Origin: Spain | Sweet Vernal Grass Tea Origin: Britain | Zoborodo Drink Origin: Nigeria |
| Sea-buckthorn Schnapps Origin: Denmark | Sweet Woodruff Schnapps Origin: Denmark | Žuvies kukuliai (Linden Flower Tea) Origin: Lithuania |
| Sekanjabin Origin: Roman | Türk Kahvesi (Turkish Coffee) Origin: Turkey | |
| Senegalese Guava Juice (Jus de goyave sénégalais) Origin: Senegal | Tansy Cordial Origin: Britain |
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