Regarding the sugar factor, I have long abandoned the idea of not using artificial sweetners and losing or maintaining weight. Unfortunately they are a necessary evil. The question is which one and how to effectively sweeten any soda stream product if not using a premade mix.
toria wrote:Thats a lot better than a coke that has about ten teaspoons for a can.
JoelF wrote:I'd be interested in experimenting with using real sugar, but minimally.
I mean, look at iced tea. If I'm drinking it at a restaurant, I'll use one sugar packet, maybe two if I put a lot of lemon in. That's what, 30 calories in a pint? Meanwhile, a bottled tea will have 180. So if I could stay with natural flavorings and much less sugar, I could avoid all those nasty artificial sweeteners.
spinynorman99 wrote:To add to what I wrote above about sticking with water for carbonation, History Channel re-ran a Modern Marvels on "pressure" yesterday and featured a mom & pop soda company (like the old Lasser's). They reiterated that it's always best to carbonate the water rather than the final product because water absorbs the carbonation more readily. Once you add stuff to water the solubility of the CO2 drops appreciably. They also vary the carbonation by product with colas being more fizzy and fruit sodas less fizzy.
boudreaulicious wrote:spinynorman99 wrote:To add to what I wrote above about sticking with water for carbonation, History Channel re-ran a Modern Marvels on "pressure" yesterday and featured a mom & pop soda company (like the old Lasser's). They reiterated that it's always best to carbonate the water rather than the final product because water absorbs the carbonation more readily. Once you add stuff to water the solubility of the CO2 drops appreciably. They also vary the carbonation by product with colas being more fizzy and fruit sodas less fizzy.
I know this is off-topic but it may finally solve a mystery for me. Are commercial sodas like Coke, etc. carbonated with the syrup when packaged? I ask because we buy a lot of Izze in the 12 oz bottles and you can leave them half empty and uncapped for days and they don't lose their carbonation, while a 2 liter of diet coke open for an hour and then capped will go flat in less than a day.
toria wrote:I see your earlier posts regarding shopko so maybe they are back.
P.S. What would be really neat is if someone would invent a beer syrup. Then you could pour it in the bottle add some grain alchohol and make your own beer easy.
exvaxman wrote:yes, tonic water syrup is available. Sur Le table has it. It does include quinine.
october271986 wrote:My one pet peeve with the soda stream is that the bottle is a bit too big. I use it almost exclusively to make club soda for drinks and I don't need an entire one liter bottle for that. It would be nice if it also came with smaller pint bottles which wouldn't go flat before I finished it. I guess I could just drink more but finishing a full liters worth of vodka sodas in one sitting seems unwise.
spinynorman99 wrote:october271986 wrote:My one pet peeve with the soda stream is that the bottle is a bit too big. I use it almost exclusively to make club soda for drinks and I don't need an entire one liter bottle for that. It would be nice if it also came with smaller pint bottles which wouldn't go flat before I finished it. I guess I could just drink more but finishing a full liters worth of vodka sodas in one sitting seems unwise.
Sodastream sells half-liter bottles:
http://www.sodastreamusa.com/12-Liter-W ... -P132.aspx
toria wrote:The problem to me is getting the authentic syrup. I do not have problems with the machine. I do like some of the flavors but the coke and sprite tasting stuff is not on target. Its okay but not like "the real thing". If you could buy that in smaller bottles easily I think you could actually make real coke at home.