Does it at least require the presence of lemons, similar citrus or a reasonably lemon-like artificial flavoring?What we call lemonade is broader than what you would call lemonade.
Australians also seem to believe that a burger is defined by the presence of a hamburger bun and not the hamburger patty. Anything placed in a hamburger bun apparently becomes a burger.
Does it at least require the presence of lemons, similar citrus or a reasonably lemon-like artificial flavoring?
But that does make it a burger.Australians also seem to believe that a burger is defined by the presence of a hamburger bun and not the hamburger patty. Anything placed in a hamburger bun apparently becomes a burger.
I'm not sure that I trust them with identifying lemonade.
I always figured the best way to get American-style lemonade here was to buy some lemon squash and let it go flat.But that does make it a burger.
It doesn't suddenly become a sandwich because you put chicken in it.
Edit: the non-carbonated lemonade does exist in Australia, but only some small companies offer them. It's good stuff.
Australians also seem to believe that a burger is defined by the presence of a hamburger bun and not the hamburger patty. Anything placed in a hamburger bun apparently becomes a burger.
Australians also seem to believe that a burger is defined by the presence of a hamburger bun and not the hamburger patty. Anything placed in a hamburger bun apparently becomes a burger.
I'm not sure that I trust them with identifying lemonade.
Nah, lemonade is lemon, water and sugar.Wait what, lemonade isn't supposed to be fizzy? If you ask for a lemonade here you'll always get them bubbles (French here)
I like this oneI always figured the best way to get American-style lemonade here was to buy some lemon squash and let it go flat.
That would be like saying anything put in a hot dog bun becomes a hot dog. "Hamburger" referred to a ground meat patty long before hamburger buns were a thing.Isn't this the same everywhere? I've had chicken burgers in a lot of countries.
That would be like saying anything put in a hot dog bun becomes a hot dog. "Hamburger" referred to a ground meat patty long before hamburger buns were a thing.
Hey, if you put sliced, fried potatoes in a hamburger bun is it a chip butty or a chip burger?And we used to call first-person shooters "Doom clones". Sometimes you just find a better way to do things ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Hey, if you put sliced, fried potatoes in a hamburger bun is it a chip butty or a chip burger?
Fascinating.Ah, well see I don't think we really use "butty" in Australia; not in my area anyway.
So it'd be a chip burger for me.
We have limeade and orange juice. Cherries aren't really thought of as fruit to extract large quantities of juice from, but it may be used to color and add flavor to a lemonade. Artificially flavored drinks are referred to as "[insert fruit] drink", and we do have them in concentrated liquid form. The "-ade" suffix doesn't seem to be regulated, so products that don't contain fruit juice like Gatorade and Country Time Lemonade exist.Does US not have cherryade, limeade, orangeade etc?
You don't squeeze cherrys into flat, cold water do you?
Also am I right to understand US doesn't have concentrated juice drinks and only use powder like kool-aid?
We have limeade and orange juice. Cherries aren't really thought of as fruit to extract large quantities of juice from, but it may be used to color and add flavor to a lemonade. Artificially flavored drinks are referred to as "[insert fruit] drink", and we do have them in concentrated liquid form.
Y'all are missing out, fresh lemonade with just the right mix of tart and sweet is heavenly.
Are lemons ungodly expensive in these locations or something?
Nope. A fizzy fruit flavored drink would be called a soda or pop. So your cherryade, limeade and orangeade would be cherry soda, lime soda and orange soda respectively.Are your limeade and orangeades fizzy though?
Cherryade isn't lemonade with added cherry flavouring, it just cherry flavoured fizzy drink.
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We have limeade and orange juice. Cherries aren't really thought of as fruit to extract large quantities of juice from, but it may be used to color and add flavor to a lemonade. Artificially flavored drinks are referred to as "[insert fruit] drink", and we do have them in concentrated liquid form. The "-ade" suffix doesn't seem to be regulated, so products that don't contain fruit juice like Gatorade and Country Time Lemonade exist.
That's a carbonated Grape Drink.
Australians also seem to believe that a burger is defined by the presence of a hamburger bun and not the hamburger patty. Anything placed in a hamburger bun apparently becomes a burger.
I'm not sure that I trust them with identifying lemonade.
Yup. They're also marketed as that, with few exceptions like Schweppes.Every soft drink but coke was pretty much considered lemonade in Germany when I was there.
Was going to post this. What we consider 'limonade' here is very broad, but mostly it's Fanta and Tönissteiner lemona.. uh sodas. I'm sure plenty of people here'd consider Sprite lemonade too.In Belgium, they call every flavor of Fanta lemonade. So you basically have "cola" and "lemonade"
This is what is called Lemonade in Denmark too, at least from my experience. Sprite is just referred to as a soda. Or maybe a lemon/lime soda.Never heard anyone call any commercial sugar-filled soft drink a lemonade before, in two different European countries.
Lemonade = freshly squeezed lemons in cold water with an optional small splash of sugar.
That's barely an issue, it's the fact they call any desert pudding I can't get use to. I've listened to hundreds of hours of Brits talk during podcasts, and it's still an earworm I've yet to overcome.
Nobody has ever once considered Sprite 'Lemonade' in the UK.
Never has this happened.
No, don't you ever kick back with a nice glass of oil or pure alcohol?
Lemonade shouldn't be totally clear like water.
I consider Sprite to be a lemonade with lime flavouring. I'm in the UK.Nobody has ever once considered Sprite 'Lemonade' in the UK.
Never has this happened.