Jump to content
  • Welcome to the eG Forums, a service of the eGullet Society for Culinary Arts & Letters. The Society is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization dedicated to the advancement of the culinary arts. These advertising-free forums are provided free of charge through donations from Society members. Anyone may read the forums, but to post you must create a free account.

Edit History

rotuts

rotuts

its cooling off here 

 

however , I thought I read somewhere on this thread

 

that ' malt ( syrup ? ) was made w malted grain and dried milk 

 

and i can't find that ref.

 

there are regional differences 

 

or at least used to be ( pre Click-Return )

 

a milkshake always had ice cream , and the flavor of the ice cream

 

determined the name of the milkshake  ie chocolate , vanilla , strawberry

 

' malted '  as a single word was not used to describe a milk beverage 

 

it was always malted milk, 

 

if malted syrup was added to a milkshake , it was called 

 

a malted milkshake.

 

there are lots of common ordinary terms 

 

that are quite different on each coast.

 

Im unfamiliar w the middle of the country

 

except for the Time I served in Chicago

 

and I don't remember any significant differences 

 

but i was very busy 

 

When I went to college in the East

 

bits of language seemed quite foreign to me

 

but as the vast majority of students at that college were

 

from the East , I was considered the foreigner .

 

one other student in my dorm was from California

 

but he was from LA 

 

a foreign country enough , if you grew up in N.CA.

 

 

rotuts

rotuts

its cooling off here 

 

however , I thought I read somewhere on this thread

 

that ' malt ( syrup ? ) was made w malted grain and dried milk 

 

and i can't find that ref.

 

there are regional differences 

 

or at least used to be ( pre Click-Return )

 

a milkshake always had ice cream , and the flavor of the ice cream

 

determined the name of the milkshake  ie chocolate , vanilla , strawberry

 

' malted '  as a single word was not used to describe a milk beverage 

 

it was always malted milk, 

 

if malted syrup was added to a milkshake , it was called 

 

a malted milkshake.

 

there are lots of common ordinary terms 

 

that are quite different on each coast.

 

Im unfamiliar w the middle of the country

 

except for the Time I served in Chicago

 

and I don't remember any significant differences 

 

when I went to college in the East

 

bits of language seemed quite foreign to me

 

but as the vast majority of students at that college were

 

from the East , I was considered the foreigner .

 

one other student in my dorm was from California

 

but he was from LA 

 

a foreign country enough , if you grew up in N.CA.

 

 

×
×
  • Create New...