SMOOTHIE
Around the
turn of the 20th century, soda fountain jerks were hand-tossing stainless steel
cups of creamy milkshakes from milk, ice cream, and flavored syrups. But the
fruit smoothie hadn’t even been thought of yet, nor was it possible until Fred
Waring marketed Steve Poplawski’s new invention, which came to be known as a
blender.
The blender
was first sold to drugstores with soda fountains and to bars and restaurants
with bars. Milkshakes were the first drinks to be made in the new blender
machines. These new machines didn’t come to be used on the beaches of
California until around the mid-1960s.
The
earliest fruit smoothies were thick, frozen drinks made from orange juice,
strawberries, and ice, and although they shared the electric blender in common
with the longer-standing milkshake, smoothies were a completely different drink
aimed at cooling and refreshing beach-goers. Catering to the resurgence of
macrobiotic vegetarianism in the United States, restaurants added smoothies to
their menus, and the drink spread around the country.
Many
commercial products have evolved since the late 1960s, and now the word
smoothie is generic, meaning a thick drink blended from fruit juice and fruit.
Today the international smoothie industry is a multibillion-dollar revenue
generator with new drinks sporting supplements and herbal tinctures along with
other healing substances.
Cookbook
authors have expanded the smoothie category to include vegetables and dairy,
bringing it right back to the milkshake. But the true smoothie will always be
the icy cold fruit juice, fresh fruit, and ice beach quencher.
RECIPE OF THE DAY
BRUSCHETTA
Ingredients:
2 lbs. tomatoes
1/2 onion
4 cloves garlic
1 bunch basil
4 Tbsps. extra virgin olive oil
Salt and pepper
Italian bread or baguette
2 lbs. tomatoes
1/2 onion
4 cloves garlic
1 bunch basil
4 Tbsps. extra virgin olive oil
Salt and pepper
Italian bread or baguette
Instructions:
Dice and chop the tomatoes, onions, garlic, and basil, then add the olive oil and salt and pepper to taste. Slice the bread and toast it in the oven for a few minutes, then serve with the tomato mixture piled on top.
Dice and chop the tomatoes, onions, garlic, and basil, then add the olive oil and salt and pepper to taste. Slice the bread and toast it in the oven for a few minutes, then serve with the tomato mixture piled on top.
EMAIL:vanshakuniyal@gmail.com
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