It isn't the coldness, but the surface of the ice cube itself that creates the fizz. |
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A sherbet powder was produced which could either be made into a fizzy drink, or sucked into the mouth, where it would likewise fizz. |
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Drier styles became more popular, to the point where admitting to a preference for sweet red fizz was the ultimate in naffness. |
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Would you believe in this country we sell 35 million bottles of fizz per year? |
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No one would be surprised if he chose to celebrate the event with a glass of home-grown fizz. |
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English fizz is a home-produced wine that you can drink without wincing or blushing. |
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It would be difficult to take your bottle of fizz onto the terrace as the review suggests, however, because the bar does not have a terrace. |
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Salmon pink and beautifully delicate, this fizz has subtle, fruity aromas and strawberry ice-lolly flavours without the sweetness. |
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Afterwards about 30 of us went to an Italian deli for pasta, tiramisu and non-stop fizz. |
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The sister is planning a visit at the weekend bringing no less than six bottles of wine and fizz for my professional scrutiny. |
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With candles all around the bathroom and a glass of fizz in hand, it was the perfect place to drift off and forget about the outside world. |
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I could have stayed there all day, sipping fizz, denting my credit card irreparably and ruining family relations forever. |
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But then a few innings into it, he loses his fizz and is like one of the has-beens. |
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It's got some fizz and fun, but looks oddly dated in an 1980s way that hasn't yet become classic. |
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Because they never built the show up to a proper climax, this may have contributed to the lack of fizz in the audience. |
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All either manager cared about was the lack of fizz in a first half which dragged by. |
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Palpably lacking in fizz, it took some 26 minutes for a shot on goal from either side, another minute before we had one on target. |
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A veritable fizz and sense of revival wafted up and down the Harrogate International Centre's famous circular stairway. |
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His writing in the 60s which I read in my late schooldays had the urgent fizz of newly discovered and prohibited drugs. |
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This film is about a married couple that is nearly perfect on the surface, but has lost some of the fizz underneath. |
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Sparkling wines should be served in thick glasses with straight sides or flutes so that the fizz is preserved. |
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Other carbonates, like dolomite, will fizz in cold acid only after they have been powdered. |
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That great party used to fume and fizz if, in a single freak election, it was denied its rightful place as the natural party of government. |
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Champagne is supposed to be for romance, I guess because nothing says love like fizz up your nose. |
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The addition makes the tepache fizz and bubble, and it's said to be extremely good for the digestion. |
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It sounds obscene, but it's the short form of Ungespundetes, a beer matured in barrels with open bungholes so the fermentation fizz escapes. |
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By then the fizz was largely gone from the home team and the Irish supporters left the ground as they had entered it. |
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It is very aromatic and hoppy, with notes of lemon and cinnamon, and its cold fizz helps to cleanse and cool the palate. |
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My whole brain seemed to fizz and the world appeared to be a brighter, more colourful place. |
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Energy is what I'm missing, that raw, spittly, unsocialized fizz that only an overexcited nerd can produce. |
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It can be dry, medium dry, medium sweet, richly honeyed, sweet and even the leanest most acidic wines prove perfect for dry or medium dry fizz. |
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Elation seemed to bubble and fizz in my throat, and I could only giggle like a silly little girl. |
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Spring is the time in her restaurant for rum drinks, cocktails with fruit and drinks with fizz. |
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This has a crown seal, eliminating any chance of all that clean, appley fizz being spoilt. |
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This is what gives the drink it's fizz and what gives it that lively taste. |
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They might not have the fizz and the pop of aerated drinks, but they certainly contain the goodness of herbs. |
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He works the metal into small chunks before swallowing it, his stomach acids fizz at it, then it blasts out at high speed the other end. |
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The researchers say the same principal applies to any drink that gets its fizz from carbon dioxide. |
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Usually, these songs don't come from the heavyweight and cool end of the music biz, more the top forty pop 'n' fizz market. |
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Please don't bring any more of that sickly-sweet pink fizz, even if it is six bottles for a tenner. |
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All three are usually blended in the familiar French fizz we see in New Zealand as Moet and Lanson. |
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The fizz comes from the production of carbon dioxide gas that is created when sodium bicarbonate reacts with acids. |
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Though carbon dioxide is more soluble in the pop at low temperature, why does it fizz more with the ice? |
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Moments later she blew out the candles and the crowd of people around her watched the sparklers fizz out. |
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This uncomplicated Italian fizz is a bright, youthful, almost grapey bubbly with refreshing citrus fruit acidity and plenty of fruit. |
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Sparkling wines should be served in think glasses with straight side or flutes so that the fizz is preserved. |
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Sparkling water is not so harmful because it contains no sugar and the fizz is less concentrated, Mr Robson added. |
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The crucial factor in the quality of every sparkling wine is how the fizz is added. |
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It's dry with ripe passion fruit and mango flavours finished off with a sherbet fizz. |
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One expert calls some champagne that spent almost 50 years underwater in the English Channel absolutely fine, though lacking in fizz. |
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It seems that the bubbles in such drinks do not simply provide fizz, but change the flavor of the drink as well. |
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But now we are starting to think the 6-pack might just be owned by multi-nationals and be unhealthy, fermenting yellow fizz. |
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They are able to keep the fizz inside because the contents of the can are under higher pressure. |
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But it was a beautiful evening, so we sat with our fizz at a table outside and watched the sky dim. |
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We passed on a sweet and ordered a second bottle of fizz instead. |
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If you're strapped for cash you could try a less expensive bottle of fizz. |
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There is so much foam and fizz you can't see the water for all that froth. |
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The carbonation that delivers the fizz is obtained naturally during the fermentation or artificially by injecting carbon dioxide into a liquid. |
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Its fizz is caused by carbon dioxide, which is produced during fermentation. |
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It was bad enough having to keep her upright what with all that free fizz but once Frank spotted the guest of honour things went from bad to worse. |
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I watched the side at Burton and there was nothing in the game but once they concede a goal they fizz out like a bottle of pop. |
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It involves putting yeast and sugar together in a bottle to create fizz. |
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Summer is here, people are thinking about vacation, and the fizz has fizzled. |
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With an excellent structure and sophisticated suppleness, it is a classic embodiment of Franciacorta fizz. |
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But the fizz in Brazil and Turkey has yet to go flat, and the excitement and turmoil may well continue to spread across the globe. |
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Plink, plink, fizz went their drives before they headed back to the clubhouse for more coffee, bacon baps and a snooze. |
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The Tea Party in the United States still operates within the system, but its base is full of fizz and is a political force. |
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The show lacks a tenth of the fizz the malignant but gifted Limbaugh decants every single afternoon. |
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They realize that Pepsi drinkers want to know how long their Pepsis will keep the fizz fresh. |
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To deliver the fizz, beverages require a high quantity of dissolved carbon dioxide. |
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Preserve the fizz in your champagne or sparkling wine with this easy to use stopper. |
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On his way down he equalises with a little dolphin chirp that exits his ears in a pleasurable fizz. |
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If we went in at too high a rate, we could face permanent deflationary pressure, taking the fizz out of what is currently the most buoyant large economy in Europe. |
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As I sat reading in bed, I heard the solitary pop of an early firework and had a momentary pang for familiar faces and a glass of fizz. |
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Some kids from the audience joined her on the stage and tried to add fizz. |
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It is best consumed when chilled and should foam and fizz like beer. |
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Have fun scenting the secret potion and watching the fizz action when you pour in the pre measured witch hazel and safflower oil. |
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It's quite fruity with green apple, lemon and a delicate, fine fizz. |
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The graphics are a fizz of shots of Huntsman surrounded by press photographers, looking busy and besieged and at the centre of the action. |
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It is this escape of carbon dioxide that gives these drinks their fizz. |
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For me fizz, preferably champagne and preferably drunk out of doors, takes the place of lager and there is still plenty of cut-price choice around. |
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When the vinegar is added, the baking soda will fizz and seem to disappear or dissolve, leaving the gravel. |
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So even when good local fizz came on to the market, the French had been established at the top for some time, and they intended to keep it that way. |
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Hooray Henry or not, Henri is just the dab for a stab at reliable French fizz. |
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Its drawback, as serious champagne bibbers will point out, is that its open shape creates a large surface for the champagne to lose its fizz. |
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The bubbles still came out, but some of the fizz was getting lost. |
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Evan sat back in the hot tub and listened to the relaxing fizz and pops produced by the eruption of bubbles. |
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I poured a cola and waited for the fizz to settle down before topping off the glass. |
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Face foamed up, I flicked on the shaver before lowering it to my face, and allowed the blades to fizz and chug against my skin. |
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Pineapple juice will froth up like the egg white in a fizz. |
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The electric grid was going to sputter and fizz out. |
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It offered eight different choices, including classics such as whiskey sour and gin fizz. |
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Well-built fizz, more earthy, upfront fruit than some severe cheapie champagnes. |
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It seems a long time now since the modernising Gove of opposition would perch tieless on the Late Review sofa, and fizz about every novel or film, so long as it was not too downbeat or dark. |
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As the Sovetsky Sport columnist Yury Tsyban put it, if Hiddink's side produced champagne football, Capello's style is more of whisky: there may not be much in the way of fizz but there is a peaty robustness to it. |
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Muttiah Muralitharan, a Sri Lankan whose 800 Test wickets may never be exceeded, imparts fizz on the ball, in part, due to a congenital arm defect. |
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To meet this consumer demand Pepsi announced last week that it is going to be printing on all its products what it calls a freshness date, so watch that fizz. |
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It is the production of this gas, which is trapped, dissolved at pressure and spread through the wine that gives the wine its characteristic fizz when the bottle is opened. |
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This is what causes the wine to fizz when the bottle is uncorked. |
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Sometimes some carbonic gas is left in white wines during bottling to preserve them which gives a pleasant fizz to very young and dissipates with age. |
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For 90 minutes it seemed it might be Spanish fizz as his keeper David Raya Martin sparkled. |
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Political comic Will Durst thinks Bush is making less sense than a polar bear sipping a sloe gin fizz on a lawn chair. |
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The Haute-Marne district and wider Champagne-Ardenne region boast history, picturesque scenery, wildlife, mouthwatering cuisine and of course the famous fizz. |
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Elegant with savoury mulberry fruit, sweet spices and plenty of woodiness, it's a terrific glugger while the rockets bang and fizz in the background. |
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That defeat led the former Lancashire and Kent player to develop his exaggerated wrong'un, leaving opponents uncertain as to which way the ball would fizz off the pitch. |
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