Easy go to your local dealer and ask them "yo so i heard Texas skys are purple when you sip tea" then they give you the price for a dicount tell em solep don sent ya.
yes
No
New York Cocktail 2Oz Canadian Whisky 3/4Oz Fresh Lime Juice 1/2 Oz Sugar Syrup (Gomme) 1tsp Grenadine Syrup Enjoy
Fairfield, Vermont produces the most pure maple syrup for sale in the United States of America.
New York's products and resources are milk,apples,grapes,cattle,vegetables,syrup,and other fruits.
no elmira Ontario Canada whoohoo
Vermont is the leading producer of maple syrup in the U.S. Vermont produces approximately 42% of the U.S. maple syrup. Maine and New York each produce approximately 17% of the U.S. maple syrup. Other states producing maple syrup include Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, Ohio, Michigan and Massachusetts.
Quebec accounts for 93% of Canada's maple syrup market.
A drink made of milk, syrup, and soda water. There are no eggs or cream... It's chocolate syrup, milk and seltzer water. I had my first real one at Dave's Corner in NYC in 1979. It was a legendary place.
A chocolate phosphate is carbonated (seltzer) water and chocolate syrup over ice. Purists will insist on Fox's U-Bet chocolate syrup. Adding milk makes it an "egg cream" (known as a "New York egg cream" in Chicago and other places outside of New York). Phosphates, like egg creams, are originally fountain creations, and the range of flavors of phosphates equals the range of syrup flavors at the fountain. Thus, there are vanilla and strawberry phosphates (and egg creams), too.
Yes. Being from New York I know that they tap the trees all over in upstate new York and as far south as one hour north of the city. If you go to Putnam County (Wiccoppee road) on Sunday morning just up from Peekskill Hollow road and Tompkins corners they serve breakfast using their home made maple syrup from the local area. It is probably the best I have tasted.
maple syrup, wine, cheese, grapes, dairy, sweet corn, onion, snap beans, green peas, cauliflower, oats, pumpkins, squash, etc. Hope this helps!!