Author Notes: I used to be a soda jerk. The soda fountain I tended was a quaint fixture in the drugstore in Western Massachusetts where thirsty New Yorkers would hop off the Peter Pan bus that had escorted them out of the city and into the heart of the Berkshires on hot summer weekends. It was even quainter in their urban eyes because even into the early 1990s they could still get any one of 16 flavors of fountain soda for just 16 cents. This particular combination — raspberry and lime — was a winner with those parched travelers because it is so refreshing. I no longer pump the syrup from the chrome canister behind the counter. I make my own as the base for this thirst buster. – cheese1227 —cheese1227
Food52 Review: A great drink — the raspberry just flirts with sweetness and the lime gives the drink a brisk, snappy conclusion. We wouldn’t change a thing. – A&M —The Editors
Serves: four, 10-ounce beverage
Ingredients
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12
ounces frozen red raspberries
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1.5
cups sugar
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Zest of two limes
-
Juice of two limes
-
24
ounces Sparkling water
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Thin slices of lime for garnish
Directions
- Combine raspberries, sugar and zest in a saucepan and place over medium heat. Bring the mixture to a boil, stirring constantly until the berries dissolve and the sugar melts. Only let it boil for 2-3 minutes as you don’t want jam. After that time, take the syrup off the heat and let cool slightly. Strain the syrup.
- Fill a tall glass by half with ice. Pour 3 to 4 tablespoons of the syrup over the ice. Squeeze the juice of half a lime into the glass. Fill the glass to the top with sparkling water and garnish with a lime slice or two.
- Serve with a straw so that the drinker has the choice of either stirring or getting lots of syrup in the first sip (that latter is still my preference!).
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Lime, raspberries, sugar and sparkling water is all you need.
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We used frozen raspberries, and they worked out beautifully.
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cheese1227 has you add lime zest to the raspberries, giving the drink an extra zing.
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You heat the sugar, lime zest and raspberries just until the sugar is dissolved — you don't want to cook raspberries because you want to preserve their fresh flavor.
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Then it's time to strain all the seeds out. Merrill got this fun job, and she faced it bravely.
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Time to assemble. First ice, then syrup.
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Then fresh lime juice.
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Pouring the sparkling water takes great concentration.
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Time for sipping.
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