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Egg Cream

4.4

(6)

Milk chocolate syrup and seltzer in a glass with a straw.
Photo by Joseph De Leo, Prop Styling by Gerri Williams, Food Styling by Judy Haubert

If you’re unfamiliar with what goes into an egg cream, the name can be misleading: The classic drink contains neither egg nor cream. Most accounts attribute its invention to Louis Auster, who owned a candy shop on New York City’s Lower East Side in the 1890s. A traditional egg cream is made with just three ingredients: whole milk,Ā seltzer water, and chocolate syrup—you can think of it as a fizzy chocolate soda. As for the name,Ā some say it’s a mistaken translation of the Yiddish word for ā€œauthenticā€; others say it’s a mistranslation of French. While we can’t confirm its origins, this bubbly, milky, chocolaty drink quickly became a staple at soda fountains, Jewish delis, and candy stores.

Create your own vintage soda shop experience at home with this simple chocolate egg cream recipe. Soda jerks traditionally use a seltzer siphon (a.k.a. carbonated water dispenser) to give the egg cream its signature foamy head. If you have aĀ soda maker, now’s the time to break it out. You can, however, achieve a similar result using bottled seltzer or club soda.Ā 

Some New Yorkers will tell you that the only acceptable flavoring isĀ Fox’s U-Bet Chocolate Syrup. We’re not about to get caught up in the crosshairs of that debate, but we’d wager that a bottle of Hershey’s (or even homemade chocolate syrup) works just fine. But do seek out whole milk for this classic egg cream recipe: It’ll give your drink the silkiest, creamiest texture. Don’t want to run to the store? Just avoid low-fat alternatives and substitute something creamier, like half-and-half, instead.

Recipe information

  • Total Time

    2 minutes

  • Yield

    Makes 1

Ingredients

½ cup whole milk
Seltzer, chilled, to top
¼ cup store-bought or homemade chocolate syrup

Special Equipment

A long-handled spoon; aĀ seltzerĀ siphon (optional)

Preparation

  1. Pour ½ cup whole milk into a 16-oz. glass and place spoon in glass. Pour seltzer (or squirt if using siphon) into glass to reach ½" below rim; a snow-white foam will develop. Pour ¼ cup chocolate syrup into center of white foam, then stir in syrup and remove spoon through center of foam. 

    Editor’s note:Ā This recipe was first printed in the February 2002 issue of ā€˜Gourmet.’

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