Does Anyone know Why No Ice in europe?
#21
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I think it is all a cultural thing. If you grew up with or without ice..that is the way you like it!!
When Americans travel to Europe, you will not expect the ice..when Europeans travel to the US, they always have to ask to have the ice left out!! That is the way it is!!
There are many cultural differences that you adjust to..you don't complain, you adjust to wherever you are in the world..some seem strange, some unpleasant..that is all part of travel and learning how they do it someplace else.
When Americans travel to Europe, you will not expect the ice..when Europeans travel to the US, they always have to ask to have the ice left out!! That is the way it is!!
There are many cultural differences that you adjust to..you don't complain, you adjust to wherever you are in the world..some seem strange, some unpleasant..that is all part of travel and learning how they do it someplace else.
#22
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Here's a sub-question: I reluctantly admit that we visited McDonalds' in both Rome and Florence. In both cities, the drinks were fountain drinks, served with ice without our asking for it. Is ice a "McDonalds standard" world wide, such that a Roman eating at a Rome McDonalds would have to ask for "no ice", or were we given ice since we were obviously Americans?
#23
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I can't stand ice in sparkling/fizzy water because it reduces the fizz (I love really fizz water, like Spa Rouge water, that stuff crackles!). In Brussels, many places will give you ice in drinks, but only one or two cubes, not a big chunk of crushed ice.
If you want a drink that's refreshing even thought it's served hot, ask for a glass of tea with fresh mint leaves. Easy to find in Paris and Brussels.
Oddly enough, Magners Irish cider is traditionally served with ice, a departure from the usual room temp beer. So if you're in a British pub and want a drink with ice, ask for Magners.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/food/Story/0,,1771479,00.html
If you want a drink that's refreshing even thought it's served hot, ask for a glass of tea with fresh mint leaves. Easy to find in Paris and Brussels.
Oddly enough, Magners Irish cider is traditionally served with ice, a departure from the usual room temp beer. So if you're in a British pub and want a drink with ice, ask for Magners.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/food/Story/0,,1771479,00.html
#24
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I live in St. Louis, where it gets very hot and humid in the summers, and I don't like ice in my drinks. I like them on the cold side, but ice just ends up watering down whatever I am drinking. I actually find it difficult to not get ice in my drinks, as usually its such a habit that the waiter forgets that I requested it and automatically adds ice to my drink.
Everyone has their own preferences, and ice is obviousy an American preference. I don't think Europe should have to change their ways to suit our tastes.
Tracy
Everyone has their own preferences, and ice is obviousy an American preference. I don't think Europe should have to change their ways to suit our tastes.
Tracy
#25
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Tracy, I don't think anyone is asking Europe to change its ways to suit our tastes. It seems like whenever one expresses genuine curiosity about WHY certain things are different in Europe, that is often mistaken on this board as a desire for things to be the same.
When ice started to become readily available in the developed world, why did Americans like it in drinks and Europeans didn't? I find that kind of thing quite interesting.
When ice started to become readily available in the developed world, why did Americans like it in drinks and Europeans didn't? I find that kind of thing quite interesting.
#26
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>Is ice a "McDonalds standard"
No longer (at least here in Germany) you get your Coke without ice. It was annoying to always have to ask "without ice", now they finally changed their policy to be more reasonable. The still sell bottled tab water btw and people are acually buying it.
No longer (at least here in Germany) you get your Coke without ice. It was annoying to always have to ask "without ice", now they finally changed their policy to be more reasonable. The still sell bottled tab water btw and people are acually buying it.
#27
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Missy, my comment was just a loose comment. Of course I don't think that anyone here expects Europe to change to suit our tastes. Its just that questions like this come up quite often. We should just accept that things in Europe are different than at home and go with the flow.
Tracy
Tracy
#28
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We're hardly asking Europeans to change their ways. It is a matter of preference and every restaurant I have been to has been accomodating. Many people who travel from other countries to the U.S. make preference requests as well. And since restaurants are in the service industry, I think they make every effort to please their customers.
I would prefer my fizzy water without ice too and if the bottle comes cold, I don't add it.
I would prefer my fizzy water without ice too and if the bottle comes cold, I don't add it.
#29
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Neo..after all those iced drinks you've had in your lifetime I am sure you understand that havuing ice in a drink doesn't immediately put it into a "watered down" state but then again, i wondered why all the guys complained about the lousy booze at your parties!
#31
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It's not just in Europe. In most parts of the world, people rarely ask for over-iced drinks. Maybe for dessert, but certainly not with meals! Americans seem to prefer everything super-cold or overheated and can't seem to adjust themselves to the local habits or anything in-between. I've heard Americans complain about beer not being served ice cold (it's served just chilled everywhere else) and also not being strong enough (as if the only reason to drink beer is to get drunk). In other places, when it's hot, they enjoy (or tolerate) it- they just minimize their physical activities, they don't turn the AC on full blast. When it's cold, they shut the windows, wear wool socks and hats, maybe turn up the heat a little, but don't make their homes a furnace. What else? "Why don't Asian restaurants in Asia have soy sauce on the table so you can drown your white rice and already-seasoned food with it?" or "Why don't they give you fortune cookies at the end of a meal? It's not hard to make."
#32
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Tracy, I go with the flow, but I'm still fascinated with the WHY of the differences. I'm still waiting for someone to tell me how the whole wash cloth thing got started. There was obviously an era where ladies sewed everything their family used; did American ladies make small little squares to use as what we know as washcloths, and the French and Italian ladies didn't? Or did it all start when towels started being mass-produced, and washcloths were the idea of some American towel manufacturer? The differences that persist, despite "globalization," are so interesting to me.
#33
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At most Mickey D's world-wide (and I've been in them from Cairo to Beijing) mainly to pick up a bottled water or a milkshare, since I don't eat meat, and sometimes just to check out what local foods they have on offer (always a few things interesting and different for local tastes) they'll do the ice thing as requested-in other words, if Americans are coming in for a drink, and request ice, or they know that the person ordering is American, they'll fill up the cup with ice, without making you force them to do so-as it properly should be-it is an American chain-if a European doesn't LIKE that, why, go get one of your nice room-temp. cans of Coke that you can get everywhere else.
I did note this last trip in May to Vienna that there were almost all Viennese in the Mickey D's and they didn't seem to have any problem with ice in the drinks there on one warm day.
Coke, by the way, is an American invention, out of Atlanta, GA, and since the early 1900's has ALWAYS been served with ice-particularly fountain cokes-which simply do NOT taste the same WITHOUT ice-it's too syrupy-sweet otherwise.
When I'm in Italy in the summertime, it seems I don't have too much of a problem getting more than the one tiny ice cube in a drink when it's very hot outside-certainly not as much of a problem there as in the UK, that's for sure.
As far as "ice" not cooling you down, or upsetting your stomach, well, someone needs to tell medical personnel that when someone is rushed to the hospital with a fever-the first thing they do is wrap the person in ice blankets and/or put the person in an ice bath to get their temperature down-so there must be SOME good reason why ice is thought of as a coolant, for otherwise disgustingly tepid drinks such as one all too frequently gets in Europe when its hot outside.
And as for the rest of the world, well, I go to Thailand and S.E. Asia fairly frequently, I never have a problem getting an ice cold drink there-that's out on the street, or in little grocery stores stopping in to pick up a bottled water-ICE COLD-ALWAYS. In Bangkok restaurants, I get as much ice as I want. Same in the Middle East-have never gone anywhere in Egypt, Jordan, Morocco where I didn't get ice the way I want it, only in Europe do they seem to have this overly fastidious aversion to ice in drinks-particularly in their overheated, horribly stuffy, undercooled public spaces, and on hot days.
And to drink sparkling water, which I love, at "room temperature" is absolutely incomprehensible to me, as you really do not get the full crisp refreshing bite of such water UNLESS it's ice cold.
For my part, it's the Europeans who are out of sync on this issue-not the other way around.
I did note this last trip in May to Vienna that there were almost all Viennese in the Mickey D's and they didn't seem to have any problem with ice in the drinks there on one warm day.
Coke, by the way, is an American invention, out of Atlanta, GA, and since the early 1900's has ALWAYS been served with ice-particularly fountain cokes-which simply do NOT taste the same WITHOUT ice-it's too syrupy-sweet otherwise.
When I'm in Italy in the summertime, it seems I don't have too much of a problem getting more than the one tiny ice cube in a drink when it's very hot outside-certainly not as much of a problem there as in the UK, that's for sure.
As far as "ice" not cooling you down, or upsetting your stomach, well, someone needs to tell medical personnel that when someone is rushed to the hospital with a fever-the first thing they do is wrap the person in ice blankets and/or put the person in an ice bath to get their temperature down-so there must be SOME good reason why ice is thought of as a coolant, for otherwise disgustingly tepid drinks such as one all too frequently gets in Europe when its hot outside.
And as for the rest of the world, well, I go to Thailand and S.E. Asia fairly frequently, I never have a problem getting an ice cold drink there-that's out on the street, or in little grocery stores stopping in to pick up a bottled water-ICE COLD-ALWAYS. In Bangkok restaurants, I get as much ice as I want. Same in the Middle East-have never gone anywhere in Egypt, Jordan, Morocco where I didn't get ice the way I want it, only in Europe do they seem to have this overly fastidious aversion to ice in drinks-particularly in their overheated, horribly stuffy, undercooled public spaces, and on hot days.
And to drink sparkling water, which I love, at "room temperature" is absolutely incomprehensible to me, as you really do not get the full crisp refreshing bite of such water UNLESS it's ice cold.
For my part, it's the Europeans who are out of sync on this issue-not the other way around.
#34
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I sometimes found the ice annoying when thirsty - trying to GULP down a drink and get the ice OUT OF THE WAY!
Sensitive teeth - EEK!
Also when drinking a jim beam and coke - if you add the ice it certainly waters the bloody drink down (well maybe only the first couple because the rest go down MUCH FASTER).
If you have a cup of tea on a hot day it makes you sweat a little and thus cools you down faster? Mum used to say that....
Some drinks (soft or otherwise) are meant to be served CHILLED and others are meant to be served at room temperature - it certainly affects the taste on some things.
If I want ice I ask for it. If I don't I ask for it that way.
Sensitive teeth - EEK!
Also when drinking a jim beam and coke - if you add the ice it certainly waters the bloody drink down (well maybe only the first couple because the rest go down MUCH FASTER).
If you have a cup of tea on a hot day it makes you sweat a little and thus cools you down faster? Mum used to say that....
Some drinks (soft or otherwise) are meant to be served CHILLED and others are meant to be served at room temperature - it certainly affects the taste on some things.
If I want ice I ask for it. If I don't I ask for it that way.
#40
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illegallady, I wasn't trying to be mean, condescending or offensive, and I'm sorry if I came across that way; that's just not the way I am. I was just giving my opinion. Isn't that what this forum's about?
I did answer your question with my opinion. I think that its just a matter of personal taste and cultural differences. I'm sure Europeans come over here and wonder why we put ice in our drinks, but its just the way we do things and the way we do things.
My comment about not expecting Europe to change to suit our tastes was more of a joke and certainly I didn't mean anything by it.
Tracy
I did answer your question with my opinion. I think that its just a matter of personal taste and cultural differences. I'm sure Europeans come over here and wonder why we put ice in our drinks, but its just the way we do things and the way we do things.
My comment about not expecting Europe to change to suit our tastes was more of a joke and certainly I didn't mean anything by it.
Tracy