Well its just like a coke or a root-beer float you take JUST vinella ice cream and you know what else to do ta-ta for know> any more suggetions or questions just e-mail me tinkerbell.butter@Yahoo.com thanks
The first ICE-CREAM SODA was sold in US in 1874.
An ice cream float and a soda geyser
yes he did he made the ice cream soda in the late 1800s
i think a root beer flot will be good
ice cream dew soda
The word 'soda' is a noun (a word for a thing) modified by the compound noun 'ice cream'. When a noun is used to describe another noun, it's called an attributive noun (or noun adjunct).The term 'ice cream soda' is a noun phrase, a group of words consisting of a noun (soda) and all of its modifiers (ice cream).
in evanston illinoise in 1890, They sold what we call an ice cream float, but on sundays, there was this law that wouldnt let them sell soda, so they took away the soda, and thats an ice cream sundae.
4.206969
You need a glass, ice cream, and carbonated soda (pop); the flavors for each are your choice. Take a scoop or a big spoonful of ice cream and drop it into the bottom of the glass. Fill the glass with soda, the ice cream will float to the top; voila, an ice cream float. One of the most popular are vanilla ice cream in root beer called a root beer float or a brown cow.
well soda taste more good then eggs and if you ever had a root bear drink with ice cream in it rocks well soda is much better any way I don't think this person knows what egg creams are and may not know the difference between an ice cream soda and a coke float or root beer float. An egg cream is chocolate syrup, seltzer, and milk or cream. Just a drink. Add ice cream to that and you have a chocolate ice cream soda, but you could use a different kind of syrup for a different flavor ice cream soda. I think egg creams are only chocolate. You could obviously make the same drink with a different syrup, but I don't think it would count as an egg cream.
A soda jerk (or soda jerker) was a person - typically a youth - who operated the soda fountain in a drugstore. The term refers to the person who made an ice cream soda. This was made by putting flavored syrup into a specially designed tall glass, adding carbonated water and, finally, one or two scoops of ice cream. The result was served with a long handled "soda spoon" and straws. The name soda jerk came from the jerking action the server would use on the soda fountain handle when adding the soda water.
Robert Green.