Found this while surfing the web. This is a list of every Slurpee Flavor produced by 7-11 as of July 2003. I haven't even seen half of these..
Red Creme, Root Beer, Coke, Citra Sprite, Cherry Coke, Mello Yello, Pink Lemonade, Surge, Warhead, Sour Strawberry, Sprite Remix, Memphis Melon
Pineapple, Orange Raspberry
DR. PEPPER
Banana, Grape, Super Sour Watermelon, Birch Beer, Kiwi Strawberry, Vanilla, Blue Cherry, Orange, Yellow Cherry, Blue Raspberry, Red Licorice, White Cherry, Ginger Ale, Super Sour Apple, Wild Cherry
Watermelon, Wild Cherry Frozen, Wonka Laffy Taffy, Blue Vanilla (Dairy)
Blue Raspberry Freeze, Red Cherry Freeze, White Cherry Freeze
Bruisin Berry, Sour Green
Blue Cherry, Lemonade, Blueberry, Orange, Raspberry Lemonade,
Cherry, Passion Fruit Orange, Sour Blue Raspberry, Fruit Punch, Peach Strawberry, Grape, Pineapple
Code Red, Blue Shock Freeze, Mountain Dew Live Wire
Mountain Dew, Pepsi, Diet Pepsi
SOBE Enegry Drink
Hawaiian Punch
2006-06-08 09:20:45
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answer #3
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answered by Girly♥ 7
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In 1965 the Slush drink was first invented by the ICEE Company. Two years later 7-Eleven licensed the process and started selling it as the Slurpee. It is a partially frozen beverage that comes in various fruit and soda flavors. 7-Eleven, once an American corporation, is now a worldwide franchise and Slurpees are offered in many, but not all covered countries. Slurpee is a registered trademark of the 7-Eleven corporation.
Machines to make frozen beverages were invented by a Dairy Queen franchise owner Omar Knedlik in the late 1950s. The machine mixes a syrup that is carbonated, flavored, sweetened, in a partially frozen and pressurized rolling tumbler, resulting in tiny specks of ice suspended in sugar and bubbles of gas (the same result can be achieved by partially freezing a bottle of soda; if approximately half the bottle is frozen, the frozen portion will have the consistency of a Slurpee). By constantly mixing the mixture in a Slurpee machine, the water is unable to separate from the sugar and carbonation and thus only tiny pieces of ice can form. Machines in this category are referred to by the industry as Frozen Carbonated Beverage (FCB) devices, and 7-11 sources their equipment from suppliers that include IMI Cornelius and the Taylor Company.
The Slurpee machine has a dispenser knob for each flavour at the front of the tumbler/freezer, where generally the patron pours their own Slurpee. Common flavors are frozen Coke and cherry, but new flavors are introduced regularly. Slurpees are particularly popular on hot days; July 11, or 7-11 on a calendar is notable as in most locations customers are offered one free 7.11 fl oz (210 mL in the USA, 200 mL in Canada) slurpee. Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada holds the record for annual Slurpee consumption, followed by Calgary, Alberta and Detroit, Michigan.
2006-06-07 22:35:54
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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