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    • Water. Hydrating, inexpensive and sugar-free: water is the best choice for drinking over the day. If you want to give it some flavour without adding sugar, try adding ice cubes and fresh mint or strips of cucumber.
    • Tea or coffee without sugar. Although some people think that the caffeine in tea and coffee might damage their health, this isn’t the case for most people.
    • Sugar-free drinks e.g. sugar-free cola, sugar-free lemonade, and no-added-sugar squash. These drinks contain artificial sweeteners, which will provide a sweet taste but won’t have an effect on blood sugar levels, which is good for people with diabetes.
    • Fruit juice (150mls) Stick to 150mls and a glass of pure, unsweetened juice can count as one of your 5 a day. But be aware that even though fruit juice will come with vitamins, it also contains free sugars – 2-3 tsp in a small glass.
  1. What are the main differences between Beer and Lemonade? We used Alcoholic beverage, beer, regular, all and Lemonade, frozen concentrate, white, prepared with water types in this comparison. Infographic

  2. Sep 29, 2016 · Beer has been shown to help combat heart disease, and cutting it with lemonade is a great way to get the health benefits without overdoing it. Use filtered water and only organic fruits and other ingredients to reduce your exposure to toxins and make your lemon tonic as nutritious as possible .

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › LemonadeLemonade - Wikipedia

    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]

  4. Nov 13, 2015 · By 1833, ginger beer and carbonated lemonade were widely available at Britain’s refreshment stalls. Answered by one of our Q&A experts, Greg Jenner. This article was taken from the November 2015 issue of BBC History Revealed magazine. There is a lot of debate as to when lemons were first used in food and drink.

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  5. 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...

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  7. One story from 1912 goes like this: A concession worker "invents" pink lemonade when he accidentally drops red-colored cinnamon candies into a vat of regular lemonade. In proverbial "the show must go on" style, he serves the lemonade anyway and the people lap it up.

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