Sparkling water=good
Sparkling coffee=?
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Replies (112)
Ever have an Espresso Tonic?
That's.... A thing that exists
(Not a huge fan)
Hmmm π€
Damnit. No, I havenβt and it seems that everything that ever will be has already been invented.
What about chocolate covered cheese?
Could be good π€·ββοΈ
Meh


Red Bull
Wrong. Sparkling water = amazing
TRUTH
Yeah but itβs yucky lol
Iβm questioning your life choices.
I'll let you guinea pig this one π
I like to fuck around and find out, but then instantly forget whatever I learned
My sparkling water is berry flavored so we shall see indeed
Wat?
Espresso tonic. It's really yummy, with a splash of lemon.
I SAID it π
nostr:npub147fp2j606qpfysp38phhzvempt7ewsdqwm6uww9uycp6tdvavu0s5paq44 just ruined my night by informing me of it.
I really thought I thought of something new there for a minute ππ
Thereβs nothing wrong with flat coffee.
Nor flat water π€·ββοΈ still like sparkling π
Sparkling water is superior. Flat coffee is unimpeachable.
β¦have you tried sparking coffee?
Nope. And you canβt make me!
Let me know how it turns out. I'd be lying if I said I didn't also think of this ππ€·ββοΈ
nostr:nprofile1qqst5x9k23f40nlcu5c6enlp6cy6g8hnqglm5pcak89ltfn5frqeq3spz9mhxue69uhkummnw3ezuamfdejj7qgkwaehxw309aex2mrp0yhxxmmfdehhxtnfduhszxnhwden5te0wp6hyctkd9jxztnwdaehgu3wd3skuep0uplhlr has that on Wednesdays.
Yes, I've done it. I made cold brew, and forced corbonated it with co2 in a pressure vessel. I love coffee, especially cold brew, and I love sparkling water. They are essentially the only two liquids I drink.
It was terrible, I was disappointed.
I would be interested in trying it with nitrogen, instead of co2, I think it would be amazing. The starbucks nitro cold brew is after all one of finest beverages ever made.
Like Cheesy Chocsβ’?
wait is there such thing? nnnnooohhh π±
Now I am curious how it will taste π€
Toxic. Fun fact: Did you know coffee removes 40% of blood flow to your brain? π
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jqcnfYfYYdY
it also synergises with nicotine to make that even worse
also, the ones with sucralose and acesulfame-K are nephrotoxic. i lost my perfect vision because of that. also fucked up my muscles and neuromuscular function (the latter being how it messed up my vision, i have a convergence problem now at short distances, that makes my focus weaker).
Did you mean caffeine? Or basically coffee and cigarettes = bad?
Coffee with sucralose and acesulfame-K? Which ones have that?
almost all "sugar free" everything (not just drinks, either) has that. stevia is relatively nontoxic in comparison (it still strains the kidneys) and aspartame has different toxicity mostly related to it being a methyl ester (which decomposes in the intestines, releasing methanol).
this would explain why coffee and cannabis go so well together. cannabis dramatically increases blood flow to the brain, although it lowers blood pressure which causes orthostatic hypotension (where blood rushes away from your brain when you stand up after sitting for a while).
Yes. But made with tonic water. And espresso.
It's called an espresso fizz.
Don't knock it til you try it.
Great way to caffeinate and stay cool in the summer.
This really sucked! I like my coffeeπ
Guess I have to ramp it down a bit.
Topo Chicaaaaaaaaa
Say it with me : Carbonated iced coffee π€
I thought that was when we wear pink?
With πβπ©

I uswd to drink Sparkling milk, so I'd fucking try it at least.
How in the world do you get sparking milk π€£
I gotta check it out
Oh wow, speech to text did me dirty. Sparkling milk. It was a Japanese brand called like Milkis or something, I believe. I could be misremembering the brand name.
But it was effectively carbonated flavored milk.
Put limoncello in it. Then it's a limoncello coffee spritz.
Glitter!
I have made this once. Only once. Mistakes were made and palates were traumatized.
If you want deliciousness track down a recipe for New England style Coffee Milk. Like chockie milk, but caffeinated!
Damn. What can remove 80% because I think I need that?
Yum
Damn I didnβt even think about that, but I do love me a responsible speedball
Apparently!
Damnit π
So fucking scientific lol. I was just gonna pour sparkling water in my coffee and see what happens
Yes
I like sparkling better π€
wtf lol
Didnβt know that was a thing
Yummmπ€€
lol Iβm from New England, I know all about coffee milk
Milkis. Some Japanese carbonated milk drink thing.
Did you enjoy it??
No pink or chocolate covered Cheese today. π€
100% I'm minorly upset that it's kind of hard to find nowadays. Although at this point I'd probably just be drinking it for nostalgia.
Iβm wearing tie dye lol
Utterly bizarre π
Black and navy π€·ββοΈ maybe tomorrow
I have like 1 pink shirt. Would like moreπ€·ββοΈ
I saw it in a video with an Italian nonna. Must be good then.
Omg Iβm obsessed with nonnas so I believe you
I have a few.
Starbucks was trying to pass off lemonade coffee as a thing last year. I tried it. It was not a good idea.
This upsets me more than when I tried some pomegranate latte drink that tasted like blended fairies, rainbows, AND then added sugar π€’
I tried milk in the Sodastream when I was young.
Do not recommend. π
If you find it in an Asian store near you, I highly suggest trying it at least once.
Actually, remembering it makes me realize how horrid that thing was. But this still seems pretty bad πΆ
yeah, carbonic acid curdles milk. sparkling coffee would be black, or else.
I don't do Starbees because they always put too much sugar in the drinks.
Just fill coffee into your soda stream and find out!
Same. This drink of blended fairies was not of Starbucks though, which surprised me. I trusted that place. π
I don't understand that reference.
It's a girl thing. Don't worry about it.
What the actual fuck? Ew
Ewww
Ok fineeeeee
We arenβt telling you! π
Yeah!!
π€£ I can't imagine that going well lol
It also makes me think of the Cement Mixer cocktail. πΈ
Of course Mr Mleku would know. π
I got punched in the leg for blowing bubbles in my milk after church. How did you survive this behavior?
I tried cola and coffee once.
Do not recommend..
I was a child in the 80s.
I was home alone with a Sodastream machine.
I am naturally curious.
Probably shit. But this was awesome: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Espresso_martini
Was expecting pomegranates, got artificial sweetener instead π₯΄
Iβd try it!
yeah, one of my favourite disgusting milk based drinks as a child was black current syrup and milk. the curdling wasn't extremely fast, mostly the milk just got thicker but it was surprisingly good. i'm just not sure that it would taste good, because actually, curdled milk also has a lot of carbon dioxide in it, a product of the fermentation.
the blackcurrant cordial syrup did curdle the milk, but is very fine and uniform.
yes, a mildly acidic juice and lots of sugar you can make a drink that is slightly curdled but doesn't taste or feel awful. if you let it sit for an hour or two, though, it will become curds and whey
Funny, I had same idea a day or two ago when noticed we were out of flat water. Opted not to try it. Did you?
I just had both separate and took sips together lol
Gonna have to ask for more details, please
Took a sip of coffee. Kept the sip in my mouth without swallowing. Took a sip of La croix, swirled it around with the coffee in my mouthβ¦
Oh I see. I was thinking brewing with the sparkling.
So...how was it?
Weird lol
one of the odd paradoxes of the solubility of carbon dioxide in water (and all dissolved gases) is that cold water dissolves more gas (and under higher pressure, also) when cold. when boiling, all gas is driven out.
you can see this in action by making two separate ice cubes. one you make with regular tap water, the other, you boil the water first, before putting it in the freezer (obviously, let it cool a bit).
if you ever wondered how ritzy bars have those fancy translucent clear ice, that's what it is. the fog of bubbles inside non-boiled water frozen to ice is the air, separated from the water but trapped inside the ice.
oh yeah, another odd and interesting thing about water and gas solubility, is that water that has had the air driven out of it by boiling, increases its soap-like properties and notably can be used to make suspensions of oily substances in water. i think the substance has to be liquid or at least viscous and liquidy at room temperature for this to work (as the floating layer will cool down faster and aggregate at the top if it is solid at the temperature).
i remember seeing some science news story about this back around 1998 or so. not sure if or where this trick is used to make oily drug substances injectable but it can do this. could also be used to make an oily substance work as a nasal spray. the movie Nirvana (italian cyberpunk starring Christopher Lambert) features him ingesting "liquid marijuana" through a speculum looking injecty device that sprays it up his nose.
yeah, that was the thing. they figured out that why oil and water don't mix, is actually because of an air layer that forms on the boundary of the oil. when there is no air in the water, this is absent and voila.
Glue baby, glue... π
I'd heard there was some fancy twice frozen system they used. This makes sense to me too
I love water science. Have you seen Feynman talk about surface tension? It's a great clip. Master of making complex science feel accessible
i have a theory about gravity that it's mediated by a special configuration of electrons acting as a cloud extending beyond the edge of matter, that when two bodies clouds touch, it creates that same effect like two drops merging into a single, same volume. except the cloud is invisible and all you see is the solid matter moving together.
haven't been able to figure out anything concrete beyond the idea that a tesla coil and resonator of some kind could gather and focus electrons into this special configuration and by this, nullify gravity.
you would also obviously know about Victor Schauberger. the phenomenon of water surface tension and the magic it can do is tantalising. you may also know of devices that use water's surface tension to mechanically break it into hydrogen and oxygen or something, an implosion effect, that can be used like back to front ICE.
since you are also talking to me about water science and as i mentioned, schauberger, you may also know of Wilhelm Reich's research into orgone. one of the things you can do to stimulate the release of orgone is to take dead organic material (leaves, branches, etc) and freeze and thaw it repeatedly. i forget what goes after that but there is devices that you can see a glow that is created by this process. most likely you know also of cloudbusters.
again, like the other reply i just made, it's all about electrons and how they are moving. i can think of easy explanations for cloudbusters. water condensation starts with dust that is charged with electrons. the tubes, and the water, focus and pull the water down (cloudbusters, properly speaking, are a metal tube, with flowing water in one end, the other end pointing upwards. i believe these attract free electrons and this makes the water prone to evaporating again.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pllRW9wETzw