Yes sherbet is non dairy. It is has no dairy products in it at all.
orange sherbet enclosed in a cardboard cylinder with a stick in the middle. You pushed the sherbet up with the stick as you ate it
No. Traditional sherbet contains dairy products.
dairy queen in Australian is called dairy queen
Yes. It's ice cream.
The list of fruit flavors that start with sherbet (same with sherbet popsicles) are: Apricot sherbet Avocado sherbet Banana sherbet Blackberry sherbet Black cherry sherbet Blueberry sherbet Blue raspberry sherbet Caimito sherbet Cantaloupe sherbet Ceriman sherbet Cherry sherbet Coconut sherbet Cranberry sherbet Dragonfruit sherbet Durian sherbet Feijoa sherbet Grapefruit sherbet Grape sherbet Green apple sherbet Guanabana sherbet Honeydew sherbet Jackfruit sherbet Kiwifruit sherbet Lemon sherbet Lime sherbet Longan sherbet Lychee sherbet Mangosteen sherbet Mango sherbet Noni sherbet Orange sherbet Papaya sherbet Peach sherbet Pear sherbet Pineapple sherbet Pink guava sherbet Pomegranate sherbet Rambutan sherbet Raspberry sherbet Sapodilla sherbet Snakefruit sherbet Starfruit sherbet Strawberry sherbet Tamarind sherbet Tangerine sherbet Watermelon sherbet
Yes; sherbert (or when correctly spelled: sherbet) does contain dairy. In the US the legal requirement to be labeled as a sherbet (or sherbert) is that it must contain between 2% and 5% dairy (and or eggs). Above 5% dairy and it can no longer be called a sherbet, it would be an ice cream (or a frozen yogurt if the dairy used were yogurt instead of a cream or milk). Below 2% and it can no longer be called a sherbet, it would be a sorbet. Sorbet is basically flavored ice, and is the precursor to both sherbet and ice cream. It may contain up to 2% dairy, but traditionally you would leave out the dairy entirely if your goal is sorbet (especially since you really need to be over 2% to get any reasonable amount of creaminess from adding it, and at that point you are now making sherbet) Sorbet, sherbet and ice cream are often easily confused. They do all use essentially the same smoothing process; the difference between them is the volume of dairy used. Sorbet and sherbet both traditionally use fruit juice as their primary flavorings (but as with modern ice creams its possible to use almost anything - aside from dairy, which would be change its definition depending on volume)
Orange Sherbet
The population of Dairy Queen is 2,008.
The population of Dairy Queen is 2,362.
Yes, you can make sherbet with coconut milk, and probably soymilk. You can also make sorbet, witch doesn't have any dairy at all.
No, that rumor is false. Dairy Queen does use real dairy products.