One of Pable Escobars plans was to smuggle coke thru in Coca Cola....how ironicThere was originally cocaine added to the recipe for coke, but it had to go when it was rumbled. The ingredients are and remain a closely guarded secret.
I am sorry @zand but if you had read my post properly, you would have seen that in fact it contained a very serious question that goes far beyond hypo's and high insulin levels. In the report they blandly state the following, without any reference:Aaaaaarrrrggggggghhhhh! Why do you guys think this is funny? This is no laughing matter. It really isn't. I suggest @Oldvatr that you drink a lot of the stuff just like I did and then tell the forum what you have discovered.
One of Pable Escobars plans was to smuggle coke thru in Coca Cola....how ironic
Coke or nicotine...I stopped a 30-year cigarette habit easier than Diet Coke. I quit for 2 years, then fell off the wagon. Still using today.
As an adjunct to your last point, my uncle was a dental surgeon, and he used to keep a bottle of coke in a window in his surgery. When asked why he said it was to dispose of molars he extracted, since the average molar lasted about 3 days in the bottle. Every so often he would refill it snce it had become full of unwanted fillings that had to be disposed of as hazardous waste (mercury amalgam in his time) He demonstrated to his younger clientele that fizzy drinks are bad by shaking the bottle and rattling it in front of them. I was impressed, However, I think my plastic ones will last a bit longer, (single use plastic, the bane of crematoriam managers) My teeth are like stars - they come out at night... Boom Boom!This was interesting reading, as I work within the Hospitality and Hotel Industry, hold my Personal Licence and been a Licensee since 1990, and obviously have come into daily working contact with such drinks. Plus, as a Scot, I have always had a tendency to possess a Sweet Tooth, but since being diagnosed as Diabetic T2 back in 2006, I have altered my drinking habits, especially with Soft Drinks and Cola's in particular.
Almost all licensed premises, plus cafes, restaurants and so on will have Soft Drinks dispensed via the Hand Held Dispenser, or "gun" as we know it in the trade. But I am sure, from taste tests once the product syrup in its box in the cellars begins to finish stock wise, or may lack Gas, both requiring changing, that the concentrated version via Hand Held guns, is far sweeter than the Bottled or Canned equivalent. One or two brands too, tend to have an almost "soapy" taste, but when customers use a Cola as a mixer, then any negative taste isn't noticeable.
Over the past 2 years or so, what with Obesity and Sugar issues being highlighted, I have noticed a shift in tastes, in that more people are shifting over to Low Calorie or Sugar Free versions of drinks. We've all no doubt read of Media reports about people complaining like mad about major changes to their favourite soft drinks brands to revised reduced or no sugar versions! Irn-Bru was a typical example, where regular drinkers went and stockpiled their full sugar version in protest; had any one of them thought once their stockpile had reduced to nothing, they'd have to revert to the newer version? In my mind, the taste difference was negligible.
One last fact about Coca-Cola, which if read from a physical perspective, makes one wonder whether the full strength version actually harms our digestive systems. In the USA, where in some of their manufacturing plants, the Cola Syrup is actually made at separate sites and transported by road to the Bottling site, by tankers holding up to 30,000 litres of the stuff in each tank.
Each trailer tank is manufactured in Stainless Steel, as is common within the Food Industry, but Coca-Cola have found from experience, they can only run these trailers for a maximum of 1 year, before they have to dispose of them as the inside surfaces, despite very regular cleaning, have corroded so badly, they've become unfit for safe transportation.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?