According to American and British cookbooks ice tea was served in the 1800's and it was often called "punch". The punch was green tea ( not black) and spiked with liquor. They were often regional in the mix and the names so it is hard to tell you where they actually come from. The use of tea as a drink dates back over 5,000 years. With the invention of the refrigerator ice tea became a fact of life and cookbooks show different types including the use of black tea.
1795, South Carolina
Introduced iced tea at the 1904 World's Fair in St. Louis.
sugar
roughly 50 50.01
Iced tea is not a soda at all it is a herbal cold tea.
Iced tea
I have checked the density of tea personnaly. It is 0.52 gm/cm3.
Iced tea and pineapple juice
Of course not! You can tell by its name, ICED tea. Maybe regular tea could burn you, but iced tea really shouldn't be hot enough to burn you. Iced tea could burn you if it was chilled with dry ice. But technically, it would be the dry ice that burns and not the tea!
sugar lemon honey
Actually, tea was introduced to the colonies in 1714. I had a project and used that on my time line.
There are a number of traditional recipes for iced tea. Some of the most common recipes include 'Plain Iced Tea', 'Lemon Iced Tea' and 'Peach Iced Tea'. Making it simply involves brewing tea in the regular way then adding it to a mixture of sugar and cold water then allow it to cool in the fridge before serving.