Buck's fizz and User:TShilo12/Peirush: Difference between pages

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{{Judaism}}
A '''Bucks fizz''' is an [[alcohol]]ic drink.
'''Jewish Exegesis''' is...
 
'''''Pshat''''' ('''פשט'''), lit. "literal meaning", is...
Recipe:
* orange juice
* chilled Brut champagne
* dash of [[grenadine]]
 
'''''Remez''''' ('''רמז'''), lit. "hint", is... (consists of looking at surrounding words or phrases, or by comparing the context of the mention of the word in one place to meanings derived from its appearance elsewhere in Torah)
# Fill a champagne glass 1/3 full of [[orange (fruit)|orange]] juice.
# Top with [[champagne (beverage)|champagne]] and a dash of grenadine.
 
'''''Drash''''' ('''דרש'''), lit. "(homiletical) interpretation", is ... (consists of comparing the word's gmatriya to that of other words, or of rearranging the letters to see what other words can be spelled with them, and trying to draw meaning from that as well)
The drink is named after [[London]]'s [[Buck's Club]] where it was first served in [[1921]].
 
'''''Sod''''' ('''סוד'''), lit. "secret", is... (a mystical interpretation of the word, phrase, or passage.)
The Buck's Fizz is the English version of the more American [[Mimosa (cocktail)|Mimosa]]. Both drinks are usually served at brunch or, tediously, at any time by outside caterers in the [[England|English]] county of [[Buckinghamshire]] which is otherwise known as 'Bucks'.
 
'''Note:''' Although the recipe given here, with grenadine, may be the original usage, most British people will understand 'Buck's Fizz' to refer to a mixture of orange juice and champagne; i.e. it is the usual British term for what Americans would call a 'Mimosa'.
 
''See also'': [[List of cocktails]]
 
[[Category:Cocktails with wine]]