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Filed under: Food Oddities, Stores & Shopping, New Products
USA Today tastes tests popular coffees
After seeing the huge response we had from all of you readers about McDonald's new premium coffee, it is no surprise that others were curious about it as well as us here at Slashfood. USA Today decided to hold a taste test, pitting four widely available coffees against each other. Included in the test were the new premium blends from Burger King and McDonald's, as well as favorites from 7-11, Dunkin Donuts and Starbucks. Dunkin Donuts is the least available variety of coffee, as there are very few store locations on the west coast, but the test was held in Manhattan where there appear to be plenty of all of the above coffee-shop types.
According to the USA Today survey, as of the time I am writing this, Starbucks was still the most popular based on readers' opinion. And they must have good taste, since Starbucks also won the taste test. Out of possible scores of "5 slurps," Starbucks ranked at 4 1/2, while McDonald's followed with 3 1/2 , Burger King with 2 1/2 and Dunkin Donuts and 7-11 with 2 slurps each. While Starbucks was also the most expensive drink in the test, the "dead-serious brew with an intense bitter chocolate aroma, a silky texture and a complex, fruity, almost wine-like flavor" made it worth it to the tasters. The other stores' coffees had flavors that ranged from "watery" to having "tobacco notes."
Filed under: The Best ... in All of New York, Raves & Reviews, Newspapers, Drink Recipes, Coffee Shops
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The history of... the Slurpee, at 40
The Slurpee is 40... and oh, the frozen cherry Coke memories. It probably won't surprise you much to learn that the Slurpee was an accident. As Slate recounts, sometime in the 1950s, a Kansas Dairy Queen owner named Omar Knedlik put some bottles of soda in the freezer to cool them quickly when his soda machine broke. The partially-frozen mixture was a hit, so Knedlik designed a machine that would be the precursor to the Slurpee. He sold it to 7-Eleven in 1965 and all the convenience store had to do was come up with a name and the first of the hundreds of flavors that would one day grace its cone-headed cups.
Filed under: Business, The History of...
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