club soda
Noun: 1. A carbonated beverage: Club soda is a clear, non-alcoholic drink that has been artificially infused with carbon dioxide gas, making it effervescent or fizzy. It is typically unsweetened and unflavored, distinguishing it from other soft drinks.
Club soda is used primarily as a mixer for alcoholic drinks (like a gin and soda), a base for non-alcoholic cocktails, or a standalone refreshing beverage. It is also commonly used in cooking to add lightness to batters.
- As a beverage/mixer:
- "I'll have a vodka with club soda and a lime, please."
- "She prefers club soda over tonic water because it has no sugar."
- "After my workout, I like to drink a glass of cold club soda."
- Culinary Use: Club soda is sometimes used in recipes, such as for making a light and crispy tempura batter or fluffy pancakes, as the carbonation introduces air bubbles.
- Example: "The secret to her fluffy pancakes is using club soda in the batter."
- Soda water: A direct synonym for club soda.
- Sparkling water: A broader category that includes naturally carbonated mineral water and artificially carbonated water like club soda. Club soda often has added minerals (like sodium bicarbonate) for a specific taste.
- Carbonated water: The most general term for water into which carbon dioxide gas has been dissolved under pressure.
- Tonic water: A different, related carbonated beverage that contains quinine and is usually sweetened.
- Soda water
- Carbonated water
- (In some contexts) Sparkling water
While often used interchangeably in casual conversation, there are subtle distinctions: * Club Soda / Soda Water: Typically refers to artificially carbonated water with added minerals (like potassium sulfate or sodium bicarbonate) for a slightly salty or mineral taste. * Seltzer: Artificially carbonated water, usually without added minerals. * Sparkling Mineral Water: Water from a natural spring that contains minerals and is naturally or artificially carbonated.
- effervescent beverage artificially charged with carbon dioxide