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While carbonated water was invented by Joseph Priestley in 1767 (with his pamphlet Directions for Impregnating Water with Fixed Air published in London in 1772), [7] the first reference found to carbonated lemonade was in 1833 when the drink was sold in British refreshment stalls. [8]
Apr 17, 2023 · The first written mention of lemonade-like drinks comes from On Lemon, Its Drinking and Use, an Arabic treatise written in the 12th century by the physician Ibn Jumayʿ, who wrote down a number of...
Britain's contribution to the lemonade craze came by way of chemist Joseph Priestley who invented an apparatus for making carbonated water. By the 1780s, Johann Schweppe, a German-Swiss jeweler, had developed a new method of carbonation using a compression pump that made mass production more efficient.
Jun 24, 2021 · Intrepid medieval drinkers may have been combining citrus with water and sugar, or honey, for any length of time, but it’s in records of 10th-13th-century Cairo that the first written evidence of lemonade is found.
In 1873, a young entrepreneur named Edward Bok set up what is believed to be the earliest known lemonade stand in Brooklyn, New York. This enterprising venture, which sold refreshing glasses of lemonade to passersby, marked the humble beginnings of the kid’s lemonade stand.
Jul 13, 2022 · "Kashkab," the first reference we have, was a lemonade made from "a combination of fermented barley combined with mint, rue, black pepper and citron leaf" (via How Stuff Works). We can think of it as fragrant, spicy, hard lemonade — a bit like the flavored beer cocktails called shandies.
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Nov 13, 2015 · The addition of bubbles had to wait, however, until 1767, when English chemist Joseph Priestley invented carbonated water, a technique exploited by Johann Jacob Schweppe, whose commercial drinks company began selling fizzy soda in England in the 1790s.