What to do with italian soda type syrups?

What to do with italian soda type syrups? - Person Slicing A Pizza With A Pizza Cutter

I go to an Italian grocery store near my house that has an aisle filled with different flavors of syrup. I know you can make Italian soda by mixing it with carbonated water but I was wondering what other things you can make with them?



Best Answer

Any kind of flavoring, really, so long as the application will accept a syrup substance. They make killer milkshakes / malts. Add them to all kinds of desserts, beverages.

I've occasionally replaced extracts and granulated sugar in a recipe with a flavored syrup but you have to experiment with the right combinations as this tends to either overpower the dish with flavor or not make it as sweet.




Pictures about "What to do with italian soda type syrups?"

What to do with italian soda type syrups? - Person Holding Coca-Cola In Can Beside Pizza on Table
What to do with italian soda type syrups? - Glass jars filled with assorted types of uncooked pasta and pistachios with almonds placed on wooden table near window in light room
What to do with italian soda type syrups? - Different types of raw pasta with wooden spoon



Can you use snow cone syrup Italian soda?

In terms of syrups, there are a bunch of fruit flavored syrup options on Amazon. I also found that snow cone syrups work just as well in these homemade Italian Cream Sodas as they do on snow cones.

How many pumps of syrup do I need for Italian soda?

Fill glass halfway with ice. Add about 6 pumps of syrup for a 16-ounce cup. Feel free to mix and match flavors!

Can you put Torani syrup in water?

Pour sparkling water into tall glass filled with ice. Add Torani syrup and stir well.




More answers regarding what to do with italian soda type syrups?

Answer 2

Coffee flavoring; Pouring it over Ice Cream; Mixing it with Cottage Cheese as a snack;

Answer 3

I always enjoyed using them in vanilla ice cream milkshakes! Coconut is divine!

Answer 4

To dress up hot chocolate. I particularly like raspberry and orange for this purpose, but many of them compliment chocolate nicely.

Answer 5

I'm Italian but I had to search "Italian soda" with Google to understand what you are talking about.

In fact Wikipedia, English edition, rightly says:

In spite of its name, Italian sodas originated in the United States, not Italy.

Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Polina Tankilevitch, Polina Tankilevitch, Sarah Chai, Klaus Nielsen