Chalav Yisrael Egg Cream 🥚🥛

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  • #1317337
    👑RebYidd23
    Participant

    Can they be bought? Any good recipes?

    #1317344
    Meno
    Participant

    Can a chalav stam egg cream be bought?

    #1317362
    zahavasdad
    Participant

    They dont sell Egg Creams, you have to make them yourself

    Its just Seltzer and Foxes U-Bet Chocolate Syrup

    #1317389
    iacisrmma
    Participant

    Approximately 1/2 cup cold whole milk*
    1 cup bottled seltzer
    2 tablespoons chocolate syrup

    * Skim or 1% milk will not foam as well.

    Instructions:
    Pour 1/2 inch of cold milk into a tall soda glass.

    Add seltzer or club soda to within 1 inch of the top of the glass; stir vigorously with a long spoon (this will cause it to become white and bubbly with a good head of foam).

    Very gently pour 2 tablespoons of chocolate syrup slowly down the inside of the glass; briskly stir with a long spoon only at the bottom of the glass where the chocolate sits. The resulting drink should have a dark brown bottom and a 1-inch high pure white foam top (if you mix it too much, the foam disappears).

    NOTE: Drink Immediately! Do not let the prepared Egg Cream sit for a long period of time (5 minutes or more) as it will go flat.

    From whatscookingamerica <dot> net

    #1317412
    👑RebYidd23
    Participant

    “They” do sell egg creams, at least in New York.

    #1317408
    Meno
    Participant

    Cholov Yisroel Egg Cream

    Ingredients:
    1 egg
    1 cholov yisroel cream

    Combine all ingredients
    Adjust proportions to taste

    Source: My brain

    #1317421
    ☕ DaasYochid ☕
    Participant

    Is it kosher?

    #1317433
    Meno
    Participant

    DY, thank you for reminding me. The egg should be from a chicken.

    And it is kosher. OR

    #1317448
    Lightbrite
    Participant

    This is very misleading! Had I not Googled “Egg Cream,” I would have never guessed that chocolate plays a crucial role in the recipe. You guys weren’t kidding! 🙂

    Meno: Think you’re missing the secret ingredient

    #1317450
    Meno
    Participant

    No I think I’m right.

    Google often makes mistakes.

    #1317453
    CTLAWYER
    Participant

    Lightbrite…………….
    Those of us older than 60 remember when egg creams were a staple of the corner stationery/candy store.
    Contrary to your understanding egg creams could be made with chocolate or VANILLA syrup.

    Growing up, the seltzer man delivered a case of siphon bottles to our home every week. My father and eldest brother loved chocolate egg creams, my mother preferred Vanilla.
    As for me, I preferred the pretzel Rod that was the usual accompiament.

    #1317469
    ☕ DaasYochid ☕
    Participant

    Meno: Think you’re missing the secret ingredient

    If he would post it, it wouldn’t be a secret any more.

    #1317564
    Lightbrite
    Participant

    Is that how egg nog came about? Making an adult version of the egg cream?

    Thanks for the new and improved info btw 🙂

    #1317565

    I’m from a generation that knows egg cream only as
    a thing that was mentioned in a Shmuel Kunda song.

    #1317567

    “With a nickel, you were rich / You could buy a red-hot knish
    Or a chocolate-covered egg cream full of foam”
    (At least, I think the lyric was “chocolate-covered” –
    egg creams are liquid, so it doesn’t seem to make sense.)

    #1317573

    Wikipedia:
    Most writing on the egg cream assumes that it originated in New York City and most often that it originated among Eastern European Jewish immigrants. This has led to a variety of claims meant to explain the widely noted paradox that the New York City egg cream is made with neither eggs nor cream.

    One theory is that grade “A” milk was used in its creation, leading to the name “a chocolate A cream”, thus sounding like ‘egg’ cream. Stanley Auster, the grandson of the beverage’s alleged inventor, has been quoted as saying that the origins of the name are lost in time. One commonly accepted origin is that “Egg” is a corruption of the German (also found in Yiddish) word echt (“genuine” or “real”) and this was a “good cream”.

    Food historian Andrew Smith writes: “During the 1880s, a popular specialty was made with chocolate syrup, cream, and raw eggs mixed into soda water, In poorer neighborhoods, a less expensive version of this treat was created, called the Egg Cream (made without the eggs or cream).”

    Darcy S. O’Neil, author of the book Fix the Pumps, a historical look at soda fountains, claims that the “New York Egg Cream” is a variation of the original milkshake served at soda fountains throughout America in the late 19th century.

    Around 1885 the milkshake became a popular item at soda fountains. Unlike today’s thick, ice cream-like consistency, the original milkshakes were made with sweet cream (sometimes frozen as “ice cream”), a whole egg, flavored syrup, and soda water. The egg, cream, and syrup were shaken in a cocktail shaker until light and frothy, then poured into a glass where the soda water was added.

    #1319319
    👑RebYidd23
    Participant

    Are there any jerks here who have a recommendation for which syrup to use other than U-Bet?

    #1319325

    “With a nickel, you were rich / You could buy a red-hot knish
    Or a chocolate-flavored ice cream cone”

    #1319329
    Meno
    Participant

    I don’t like how you all are misleading rebyidd. There’s no syrup in egg creams

    #1319334
    👑RebYidd23
    Participant

    But how are you supposed to stick the egg to the cream? Elmers isn’t kosher.

    #1319339
    Meno
    Participant

    Have they not yet come out with kosher glue?

    #1319477

    Yes, it was probably “flavored.”

    #1319489
    CTLAWYER
    Participant

    @RebYidd23………….
    We use Fox’s U-Bet,
    BUT eldest brother insists that Bosco makes a better egg cream.
    Then again, he likes Pepsi better than Coca Cola

    #1319507
    ☕ DaasYochid ☕
    Participant

    Is that reliable kashrus-wise?

    I though we say “ein mashgichin b’Bosco”?

    #1319541
    takahmamash
    Participant

    My mom z”l brought her love of egg creams south with her after she got married and moved from Brooklyn. I love egg creams; unfortunately, it’s not a taste my kids have acquired. Doble unfortunately, there’s no U-Bet syrup in Israel.

    #1320629
    Bookworm120
    Participant

    takahmamash, I think I remember finding Bosco syrup in Israel at some point, but it was a bit too grainy for my liking, Could be mistaken, though. It’s been a while. 😀

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