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Fri 18/06/04 at 22:17
Regular
"SOUP!"
Posts: 13,017
tastes like cheap flat coke. It's horrible.

shame on them, shame.
Sat 19/06/04 at 13:31
Regular
"Led Zeppelin"
Posts: 3,214
<< <<©H®I§>> >> wrote:
> What was the point in that whole big post, I doubt any one wants to
> know the history of root beer and plus most people won't read it
> including myself, 'cause really I just don't care about the history
> of root beer.
>
> I bet you just got that from an internet site and copied andd pasted
> it, why didn't you just give us a link and anybody sad enough who
> wants to know about it will read it.
>
> Just wanting to get your post and word count up I bet!
>
> By the way what is drowls? Are you meaning drools?

Many people like rootbeer you know, including me......
Sat 19/06/04 at 13:22
Regular
"Better Than You"
Posts: 5,204
What was the point in that whole big post, I doubt any one wants to know the history of root beer and plus most people won't read it including myself, 'cause really I just don't care about the history of root beer.

I bet you just got that from an internet site and copied andd pasted it, why didn't you just give us a link and anybody sad enough who wants to know about it will read it.

Just wanting to get your post and word count up I bet!

By the way what is drowls? Are you meaning drools?
Sat 19/06/04 at 10:41
Regular
"Led Zeppelin"
Posts: 3,214
I just love rootbeer.......... *drowls*
Sat 19/06/04 at 10:40
Regular
"Led Zeppelin"
Posts: 3,214
The history of rootbeer

The historical roots of rootbeer run deeper than many realize. Learn how rootbeer came to be and what's in this popular brew.
There's nothing quite like a frosty mug of creamy, real, old fashioned root beer. But where did this sweet beverage come from? Though the roots of root beer are so deep, they're more American than apple pie, there are varying theories about just who invented root beer and where it came to be.


FROM THE EARLY AMERICANS TO SHAKESPEARE

There are early historical documents in which Shakespeare is noted to have drank "small beers." This European brew, actually made from an early colonial American recipe, contained 2-12-percent alcohol, and was considered a light, social drink made from herbs, berries and bark. During American Colonial times, root beer was introduced along with other beverages like Birch Beer, Sarsparilla Beer, and Ginger Beer. Only root beer would emerge as a longtime favorite. There are even historical documents which show 18th century farm owners brewing an alcoholic version of root beer in backyard stills for family get-togethers, social events, and parties.


MEDICINAL ORIGINS

Most historians believe that the invention of an actual root beer recipe happened by pure accident, thanks in part to an inventive pharmacist, eager to create a miracle drug. Though people had been drinking an herbal home brewed variety for years, root beer was still just an experiment for the creative and inventive. In 1870, an unknown pharmacist toying with a handful of roots, berries and herbs, came up with a recipe for root beer which consisted of juniper, wintergreen, spikenard, pipsissewa, sarsaparilla, vanilla beans, hops, dog grass, birch bark and licorice. The original drink was quite medicinal in nature, tasting both bitter and sweet. Even though the pharmacist offered the drink to the public as a cure-all, it was never marketed or well-received.


HIRES COMPANY

Meanwhile, Charles Hires, also a pharmacist, was on his honeymoon around the same time when he discovered an herbal tea he simply could not part with. After taking the recipe of herbs, berries and roots home to Philadelphia with him, he began selling a packaged dry mixture to the public made from many of the same ingredients as the original herbal tea. Well received, Hires soon developed a liquid concentrate blended together from more than 25 herbs, berries and roots. The public loved the new drink and as a result, Hires introduced commercial root beer to the public in 1876 at the Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition. In no time, it became a popular drink of its day. By 1893, the Hires family sold bottled versions of their well-known brew, sealing their place in rootbeer history.



No matter which version of root beer history is true, one thing is for certain: Rootbeer is an original brew, predating colas and other popular sodas.


GOVERNMENT BAN

The key ingredient to root beer is sassafras root, which is what produces the tangy, thick brewed flavor that root beer is noted for. In 1960, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration banned the use of sassafras oil, labeling it a carcinogen. Root beer makers began experimenting with new and improved recipes, minus the sassafras oil, hoping to find a suitable tasting alternative. Not long after the ban, the root beer industry was saved when inventors discovered that sassafras could be used afterall, if treated first, to remove the oil.


WHAT IS IN ROOTBEER?

There's is no true authentic root beer recipe, since there are so many different combinations and brews. Over time, root beer has contained ingredients like allspice, birch bark, coriander seed, ginger and ginger root, hops, burdock root, dandelion root, guaiacum chips, spicewood, wild cherry bark and bitters, wintergreen and wintergreen oil, yellow dock, prickly ash bark and even, molasses.


Today, root beer is made from a mixture of flavorings, sweeteners and carbonation. Depending on the brew, bottler and manufacturer, root beer still contains a large number of herbs (burdock root, sarsaparilla root, yellow dock root, ginger root, juniper berries, wild cherry bark, birch bark, and etc.), oils (anise, lemon, artificial wintergreen, and etc.), sweeteners (sugar, molasses, corn sugar, fructose, asparatame, brown sugar, lactose, malt extract, and etc.) and carbonation (yeast, artificial, forced carbonation.)
Sat 19/06/04 at 03:39
Regular
Posts: 15,579
[URL]http://homepage.ntlworld.com/mandeep.bains/arguing.jpg[/URL]
Sat 19/06/04 at 01:55
Regular
Posts: 20,776
any of you guys like bill hicks?

no, never heard of him ... nah don't worry about it.

you should read this stuff, it is comedy for the free thinker : [URL]http://www.gavinsblog.com/revelations.htm[/URL]
Sat 19/06/04 at 01:47
Regular
"Dr. Chad Niga"
Posts: 4,550
Yes, quoted from me own mouth.

If you didnt realise i was saying "yes, hard" in reply to your childish "lol m8 hrd" comment. You see, you used the word hard, i found it amusing how you clearly see your self as being "hard" or you wouldnt of used the term.
Sat 19/06/04 at 01:46
Regular
Posts: 20,776
lads, lads.




*gets out big bag of sweeties*
Sat 19/06/04 at 01:45
Regular
"Which one's pink?"
Posts: 12,152
Are you using an online translator or something, and don't actually speak the English language?

"I wish I could chin you hard"

Yes, not threatening at all.
Sat 19/06/04 at 01:44
Regular
Posts: 20,776
drugging donkeys has been illegal since 1995 you sick, sick young bast.

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