which somehow inspired the dumbest comments I’ve seen in a while, and that’s saying something.
I love how the kid mentions “old Florida” in his featured (first) review. Kid’s been around for a century, apparently
Cute. I thought ST was made with sprite, not ginger ale? Are there variations on the theme?
PS: The comments, oh my. The less said about them, the better. #saltyangrypeeps
Ginger ale is what I’m used to, but obviously opinions vary.
Well, it’s been a while since my last Shirley Temple… like, roughly 40 years, so I can’t be entirely sure if the American Embassy Club in my hometown used ginger ale or sprite.
Wiki says ginger ale is the standard. I learned something new today. Cue
And…comments are closed.
Ya can’t say the mods at the NYT aren’t on top of ish. Impressive!
Lost career opportunity for my nephew. Sending to him to rub it in properly.
(Also pondering a possible career as “Biryani Queen” – but I think I’d have to inflate grades too much to make it workable.)
Oh. My. GAWD!!! I f’love this! With 240,000 followers, he concentrates on one thing and one thing only!
Sonsie in Boston really got hammered on that 1.5 cherry garnish - BUT the owners took the review properly and fixed the drink!
OMG, some adults need to get a freaking life.
When I turned 13, my parents took us to what was a “fancy” Manhattan restaurant, Top of the Sixes, at 666 Fifth Avenue. The kids got Shirley Temples, and I had filet mignon. It was the first time I noticed that restaurants could manipulate plating to appear that there was more food–the steak was raised up on a slice of bread. That building was involved in a Trump family scandal during the last term.
Ginger Ale, when I was a kid. Sprite hadn’t been invented.
That’s fascinating! I had my first ST in the 70s, probably.
I had mine in the ‘50s, when I went to grown-up restaurants. Got my training in early. I think the STs came accompanied with a booster seat.
When I was growing up in the late 50s, Shirley Temples (for girls) and Roy Rogers (for boys) were made with ginger ale, grenadine, and one cherry. I though they were the height of sophistication (along with jello cut into squares and topped with whipped cream).
Same for me when my parents would take my sister and I out to their favorite seafood restaurant. (My older brother rarely came out with us.)
Which, when I was a lot older, got a lot less sophisticated when the Jello was made with alcohol, put in small plastic cups and given out at summer concerts. Or is that more sophiticated?
I have no idea what year it was the last time I had a Shirley Temple but I’m pretty sure it was made with 7up.
The restaurant where my grandfather would take me had Shirley Temples and a huge lobster tank, which mesmerized me. So, seafood. I guess I didn’t realize it was Death Row. The neon - tubing cocktails on the wall were an added treat. They must have been a depiction of my Shirley Temple (yes, ginger ale, grenadine, and that all-important maraschino cherry!). I felt so special.
Always made with ginger ale where I was in Central Mass growing up. We used to get them at a Chinese American restaurant my mother’s parents liked in Ware, MA - Debbie Wong’s. It would come in a punch bowl for one with a plastic lotus (and maraschino cherries) floating on top to garnish.
Shirley Temples IME have always been made with a lemon-lime soda, not ginger ale. My experience with them is somewhat limited - while I probably had them a few hundred times, they were all in the same three or four restaurants. And the bar where I tended for a short time didn’t have ginger ale in the gun and they didn’t stock bottles of the stuff.
I wonder if there aren’t just temporal but regional differences whether an ST is made with Sprite/Sevenup or ginger ale? The kid mentions lemon-lime soda, and he’s probably younger than all of us