Root Beer Float Your Boat
Some people don’t like root beer; it just doesn’t float their boat. Others love root beer. For example for kids, root beer is the closest thing to an adult beverage as they could get, so naturally they will like it. Especially because the word beer is in the name! In our house we don’t drink much soda but my kids drink caffeine-free root beer once in awhile. Add scoops of ice cream to this rare occasion and you’ll witness the root beer floating our boats!
Nationaldaycalendar.com informs us about root beer floats: “Also known as the “Black Cow,” the root beer float got its start in Colorado in a mining camp. Frank J. Wisner of Cripple Creek, Colorado, gets the credit for inventing the “Black Cow” way back in August of 1893.
One night Wisner, owner of the Cripple Creek Cow Mountain Gold Mining Company, was staring out the window and thinking about the line of soda waters he was producing for the citizens of Cripple Creek when he came upon an idea. The full moon that night shined on the snow-capped Cow Mountain and reminded him of a scoop of vanilla ice cream. He hurried back to his bar and scooped a spoonful of ice cream into the children’s favorite flavor of soda, Myers Avenue Red Root Beer. After trying, he liked it and served it the very next day. It was an immediate hit.
Wisner named the new creation, “Black Cow Mountain” but the local children shortened the name to “Black Cow”.
Personally, I never knew that root beer floats were originally called Black Cows until I looked it up on Nationaldaycalendar.com. Even while scrolling thru Pinterest, many family recipes still have Black Cows in their titles. Plug in the words “root beer float” in the search bar feature on Pinterest and it will open the flood gates of so many things root beer floats can be associated with. To name a few there are: cookies, cupcakes (with cute straws poked into them), Dreamsicles, popsicles, pies, cakes, candles, exfoliating soap, macarons, scarves, math cards, taffy, popcorn, Jello etc. Two notable pieces of information that I found on Pinterest are: 1. Keto recipes for root beer floats do exist and 2. Chip Ahoy cookies have a root beer float flavored cookie available. In other words, the root beer float is not just some whimsy-flimsy flavor of the day; there are so many things that incorporate this wonderful concoction.
May I suggest that we use National Root Beer Day (August 6th) as an excuse to give out some thoughtful pinches? Besides making a few floats for ourselves, we can have some fun coming up with as many variations on how to spread thoughtfulness within our budgets, time constraints and feasible possibilities. Here’s what I came up with so far:
Additionally (#9.), I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention that adult beverage versions of root beer floats are enjoyed throughout the country. Until I saw it on Pinterest, I had no idea people mixed alcohol and/or coffee to make many different versions of root beer floats. If it’s convenient, pick up the ingredients for these recipes and give them to someone who loves adult root beer floats.
Or we come to #10. Final - My last idea for root beer float pinches is to go with a fellow enthusiast to a venue that serves root beer floats. Relax and forget about running around and assembling packages. Spending time with someone you care about while sipping on a float is precious. This may be the best way for you to celebrate National Root Beer Float Day on August 6th.
Hopefully those ten ideas will generate even more ways to celebrate on August 6th. Let’s make someone’s boat float by using National Root Beer Float Day as a reason to show some thoughtfulness.
Before I go, I just wanted to ask - doesn’t the title of this post sound similar to solving a puzzle on the show Wheel of Fortune? Pat, I’d like to solve the puzzle. Root - beer - float - your - boat. The audience cheers, bells and whistles in the background, Vanna smiles from ear to ear and Pat makes some funny remark. I won!
Pinches,
Barb