Earwax candy, delicious. Who hasn't cleaned out their ear, and sucked on the q-tip? It's about time they make it a candy.
I am constantly fishing out old diapers from the dumpster. These will save me a lot of hard scavenging work.
You strap this on to your face, and eat the candy as it drips and squirts out. I have seen lots of young kids licking the snot off of their faces, I had no idea that it tasted great.
Lemon flavored pee candy. You can swipe one of these from your doctors office, but I can't guarantee it's lemon flavored.
Gummy earth worms. Those birds in my garden have been onto something this whole time.
A little toilet filled with sour candy. They should make the sucker in the shape of a toilet plunger, or a toilet brush. Then they would have something.
A Harry Potter Cockroach Cluster. Looks pretty realistic, but I bet it tastes better than the real ones in NYC.
From the show Fear Factor, comes a custom line of candy.
Flesh Fries. My shop teacher was missing a finger. I wonder if he ate it?
Blood balls. I dunno, I guess I just don't like the idea of a squished ball squirting blood.
Zit Poppers and a box of boogers. You can squirt out delicious goo from the zit gummies. The boogers are supposed to be tangy, and look real. I guess they look real, if you stick pistachios up your nose.
Sure, polar bear poop, why not.
So, I think I speak for everyone when I say that eating a band aid you find in the trash can is delicious; but do you really think they could replicate the delicious copper/iron taste?
A journey through the unique, interesting, funny, strange and ordinary things that make up the internet. Lists, pictures, videos and more
Skyscrapers of the Future
Shanghai Tower. Shanghai, China. Estimated Completion: 2013.
Chicago Spire. Chicago, Illinois. Estimated Completion: 2012.
Federation Tower. Moscow, Russia. Estimated Completion: 2009.
International Commerce Centre. West Kowloon, Hong Kong. Estimated Completion: 2010. Apparantly, this building was going to be even longer, but they were forced to scale it back, since city ordinances don't allow buildings that are taller than the surrounding mountains.
Guangzhou TV & Sightseeing Tower. Guangzhou, China. Estimated Completion: End of 2009.
Al Hamra Tower. Kuwait City, Kuwait. Estimated Completion: 2009.
Sinosteel International Plaza. Tianjing, China. Estimated Completion: 2012.
Tower Verre. (53W53rd), New York. Estimated Completion: 2012.
Beekman Tower. New York. Estimated Completion: 2011.
The Bow. Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Estimated Completion: 2011.
Sarajevo skyscraper. Bosnia and Herzegovina. Still in the design stage as far as I know.
Alberto Fernández and Susana Ortega have conceived of a Fog Tower that absorbs and channels water from its mist enshrouded environs. This pristine helical structure would allow for the development of a sustainable agriculture environment at the edge of the Atacama Desert, one of the driest places on earth. As far as I know this is just in the design stages. I say build it, if for nothing else, to see if it can be done.
By 2012, Thom Mayne's 68-story La Phare ("the Lighthouse") will rise over the La Defense district (France). Skyscrapers are not common in Paris, so I am sure this will instantly dominate the skyline.
Eric Vergne’s Dystopian Farm project envisions a future New York City interspersed with elegantly spiraling biomorphic structures that will harness cutting-edge technology to provide the city with its own self-sustaining food source. As far as I know, this is just in the design stage.
The Burj Dubai. It will be 818m high, with 162 floors, when complete. It is slated to be completed on December 20th, 2009. Offical site.
The Euroscraper was conceived to be located in the Parisian office district of Porte Maillot and would complement the Arc du Triumph and La Défense. The concept and look of the building are inspired by Isamu Noguchi’s quest “to capture the void.” As far as I know this is just in the design phase. It is a pretty neat looking building. Perhaps not the most efficent use of space, but quite pretty.
The Dynamic Tower (also known as Dynamic Architecture Building or the Da Vinci Tower) is a proposed 420-metre (1,378 ft), 80-floor tower in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. The tower is expected to be architecturally innovative for several reasons: Uniquely, each floor will be able to rotate independently. This will result in a constantly changing shape of the tower. Each floor will rotate a maximum of 6 metres (20 ft) per minute, or one full rotation in 90 minutes. It will also be the world's first prefabricated skyscraper with 40 factory-built modules. 90% of the tower will be built in a factory and shipped to the construction site.
Nakheel Tower is a supertall skyscraper proposed for construction in Dubai, United Arab Emirates by developer Nakheel. The project was previously called Al Burj. It has been announced that construction is currently on hold, and further work on the tower's foundations will begin around January 2010.
The 40-story residential Raheja Legend is one of the first modern skyscrapers to come up since the Indian economic boom. Not to be confused with the similarly sized and named "The Legend" at Walkeshwar, Raheja Legend is a developed by K Raheja Universal and designed by P&T Group of Singapore, and is one of Raheja Builders's first major skyscraper projects in the city.
1 World Trade Center, formerly known as the Freedom Tower, is the main building of the new World Trade Center under construction in Lower Manhattan in New York City, USA. The tower will be located in the northwest corner of the 16-acre (65,000 m²) World Trade Center site, bound by Vesey, West, Washington and Fulton streets. WTC was expected to reach rooftop level by the end of 2010 with topping out expected by 2011. However in an October 2, 2008 follow-up report by Ward, the estimated completion of the tower was pushed back to some time between the second and fourth quarter of 2013 with a total budget of $3.1 billion and the use of 46,000 tons of steel.
Chicago Spire. Chicago, Illinois. Estimated Completion: 2012.
Federation Tower. Moscow, Russia. Estimated Completion: 2009.
International Commerce Centre. West Kowloon, Hong Kong. Estimated Completion: 2010. Apparantly, this building was going to be even longer, but they were forced to scale it back, since city ordinances don't allow buildings that are taller than the surrounding mountains.
Guangzhou TV & Sightseeing Tower. Guangzhou, China. Estimated Completion: End of 2009.
Al Hamra Tower. Kuwait City, Kuwait. Estimated Completion: 2009.
Sinosteel International Plaza. Tianjing, China. Estimated Completion: 2012.
Tower Verre. (53W53rd), New York. Estimated Completion: 2012.
Beekman Tower. New York. Estimated Completion: 2011.
The Bow. Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Estimated Completion: 2011.
Sarajevo skyscraper. Bosnia and Herzegovina. Still in the design stage as far as I know.
Alberto Fernández and Susana Ortega have conceived of a Fog Tower that absorbs and channels water from its mist enshrouded environs. This pristine helical structure would allow for the development of a sustainable agriculture environment at the edge of the Atacama Desert, one of the driest places on earth. As far as I know this is just in the design stages. I say build it, if for nothing else, to see if it can be done.
By 2012, Thom Mayne's 68-story La Phare ("the Lighthouse") will rise over the La Defense district (France). Skyscrapers are not common in Paris, so I am sure this will instantly dominate the skyline.
Eric Vergne’s Dystopian Farm project envisions a future New York City interspersed with elegantly spiraling biomorphic structures that will harness cutting-edge technology to provide the city with its own self-sustaining food source. As far as I know, this is just in the design stage.
The Burj Dubai. It will be 818m high, with 162 floors, when complete. It is slated to be completed on December 20th, 2009. Offical site.
The Euroscraper was conceived to be located in the Parisian office district of Porte Maillot and would complement the Arc du Triumph and La Défense. The concept and look of the building are inspired by Isamu Noguchi’s quest “to capture the void.” As far as I know this is just in the design phase. It is a pretty neat looking building. Perhaps not the most efficent use of space, but quite pretty.
The Dynamic Tower (also known as Dynamic Architecture Building or the Da Vinci Tower) is a proposed 420-metre (1,378 ft), 80-floor tower in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. The tower is expected to be architecturally innovative for several reasons: Uniquely, each floor will be able to rotate independently. This will result in a constantly changing shape of the tower. Each floor will rotate a maximum of 6 metres (20 ft) per minute, or one full rotation in 90 minutes. It will also be the world's first prefabricated skyscraper with 40 factory-built modules. 90% of the tower will be built in a factory and shipped to the construction site.
Nakheel Tower is a supertall skyscraper proposed for construction in Dubai, United Arab Emirates by developer Nakheel. The project was previously called Al Burj. It has been announced that construction is currently on hold, and further work on the tower's foundations will begin around January 2010.
The 40-story residential Raheja Legend is one of the first modern skyscrapers to come up since the Indian economic boom. Not to be confused with the similarly sized and named "The Legend" at Walkeshwar, Raheja Legend is a developed by K Raheja Universal and designed by P&T Group of Singapore, and is one of Raheja Builders's first major skyscraper projects in the city.
1 World Trade Center, formerly known as the Freedom Tower, is the main building of the new World Trade Center under construction in Lower Manhattan in New York City, USA. The tower will be located in the northwest corner of the 16-acre (65,000 m²) World Trade Center site, bound by Vesey, West, Washington and Fulton streets. WTC was expected to reach rooftop level by the end of 2010 with topping out expected by 2011. However in an October 2, 2008 follow-up report by Ward, the estimated completion of the tower was pushed back to some time between the second and fourth quarter of 2013 with a total budget of $3.1 billion and the use of 46,000 tons of steel.
15 Fantastic Beards
I want to grow a beard so badly but I don't have good connectors. The area between my chin and lip is a barren wasteland. Oh well, I'll live vicariously through these cool beards:
Sources: Sorry, lost my sources. Please let me know if any of these are your pictures.
ZZ Top
I'm sure his wife loves his beard. Not embarrassing at all when they go out into public.
A Jewish beard.
That is one long mamma-jamma.
Ah! Half man half squid! Run for your lives!
Joaquin Phoenix. I wonder if he still thinks he is a rapper. Joaquin you better be on drugs, cause you are acting crazy.
Half a beard; I think it will catch on.
Brigham Young, sporting a nice bushy beard.
An Amish beard.
Abe Lincoln
Do you have any idea how much ear wax it takes to keep your mustache that curled? A lot.
Aww, such pretty hair.
Yeah, rock on Drew Gooden.
Ok, when the end of your beard starts looking like a drain clog, it's time to trim that sucker.
I guess it's a bridge, I dunno.
Sources: Sorry, lost my sources. Please let me know if any of these are your pictures.
Popular and Unique Soft Drinks From Around the World
Note: If I have not listed an important soft drink, please let me know in the comments section, and I will post a "Popular and Unique Soft Drinks From Around the World Part 2."
What is a soft drink?:
A soft drink is a beverage that does not contain alcohol; generally it is also implied that the drink does not contain milk or other dairy products and that it is drunk cold. Carbonated soft drinks are commonly known as pop, soda pop, soda, cola, coke or tonic in various parts of the United States, pop in Canada, fizzy drinks, pop or soft drinks in the United Kingdom and Australia[1] and sometimes minerals in Ireland. The adjective soft specifies a lack of alcohol by way of contrast to the term "hard drink". The word drink, while nominally neutral, sometimes carries connotations of alcoholic content. Beverages like colas, flavored water, sparkling water, iced tea, sweet tea, lemonade, squash, and fruit punch are among the most common types of soft drinks, while hot chocolate, hot tea, coffee, milk, tap water, juice and milkshakes do not fall into this classification. Many carbonated soft drinks are optionally available in versions sweetened with sugars or with non-caloric sweeteners.
Almdudler
Almdudler is the brand name of a popular Austrian soft drink. The original Almdudler is a sweetened carbonated beverage flavored with herbs; its flavor is similar to ginger ale or elderflower cordial but with a somewhat stronger and more complex flavor. Almdudler has been called the "national drink of Austria". Its popularity in Austria is second only to Coca Cola; 80 million liters of the beverage are produced yearly.
Appletiser
Appletiser was invented in 1966 by entrepreneur apple farmer Edmond Lombardi in the fruit-growing Elgin Valley of South Africa. Using a secret blend of six different varieties of apples balanced for flavor and smell, with a bit of carbonation, but no sweeteners or preservatives. Within three years of its introduction Appletiser was already being exported to other African countries, England and Asia. In its earliest years the company made distribution deals with Coca-Cola, which later purchased a 50% share of Appletiser in 1979.
Beed Cola
Beed Cola is a Peruvian range of soft drinks. Beed Cola is produced in Pucallpa, Peru and sold throughout the Ucayali Region. Beed Cola is sold in glass bottles of 362 ml.
Beverly
Beverly is a carbonated soft drink often consumed as a non-alcoholic apéritif made by the The Coca-Cola Company and sold in Italy. The drink's distinctive bitter flavor (sometimes described as grapefruit-like) is due to quinine[1]. Quinine is also a key ingredient of tonic water, which is another soft drink noted for a bitter flavor.
Calpis
Calpis is a Japanese uncarbonated soft drink, manufactured by Calpis Co., Ltd., headquartered in Shibuya, Tokyo. The beverage has a light, somewhat milky, and slightly acidic flavor, similar to plain or vanilla-flavored yogurt or Yakult. It's ingredients include water, nonfat dry milk and lactic acid, and is produced by lactic acid fermentation.
Cheerwine
Cheerwine is a soft drink produced by the Carolina Beverage Corporation of Salisbury, North Carolina. It has been produced since 1917. Notable for its fairly unusual "cherry taste and rich burgundy color," Cheerwine has a very sweet cherry flavor and an unusually high degree of carbonation compared with many other soft drinks. Named for both its color and taste the company website explains that “it made sense to name a burgundy-red, bubbly, cherry concoction—Cheerwine." The "Retro Cheerwine" variant is sold in glass bottles and is sweetened with cane sugar instead of high-fructose corn syrup.
Cola Lacaye
Cola Lacaye is a Haitian soft drink founded by Rigobert Richardson in 1977. Today, Cola Lacaye soda is manufactured and distributed by The Brooklyn Bottling Group, which manufactures, distributes, imports various Caribbean-based soft drinks and food. Cola Lacaye comes in three island flavors; Fruit Cola, Fruit Champagne and Banana. Cola Lacaye has become part of the Haitian American cultural dining experience.
Coolpis Kimchee Drink
Kimchi is a traditional Korean side dish composed mainly of fermented spicy cabbage. The Kimchee Drink is the packaged, cloudy juice left from the fermentation process.
Dr. Brown's Cel-Ray
Dr Brown's Cel-Ray soda is a soft drink with a celery flavor. It is fairly easy to find in New York City and in South Florida. Outside the New York City region, it is rather obscure but can sometimes be found at Jewish delicatessens and restaurants. In addition, it can be found at certain grocers that specialize in American food in Israel, and other specialty grocers. The flavor is reminiscent of ginger ale, but with a more pronounced celery flavor that is more pungent or peppery, derived from celery seed extract.
Dandelion and burdock
Dandelion and burdock is a traditional British soft drink, drunk in the British Isles since about 1265. Traditionally it is made from fermented dandelion and burdock (Arctium lappa) roots, and is naturally fizzy.
Guaraná Jesus
Guaraná Jesus is a Brazilian soft drink produced by bv0, a Coca-Cola bottler based in São Luís. The drink is popular within the region, reportedly outselling Coca-Cola, and is made from extracts of the guarana plant, which contains caffeine, theophylline, and theobromine. Lago has noted that "Every Brazilian knows that guarana is a stimulant and that means it stimulates everything". The drink is named for Jesus Norberto Gomes, the druggist who formulated the drink in 1920. The drink has a pink color, a cinnamon aroma and a very sweet taste, and is marketed with the slogan "the pink dream". The drink is now a brand owned by the Coca-Cola Company.
Irn-Bru
Irn-Bru (pronounced iron brew) is a popular carbonated soft drink produced in Scotland where it has been made by A.G. Barr, of Glasgow for more than a century. In addition to being sold throughout the United Kingdom, Barr's Irn-Bru is also available in many key markets throughout the world and can usually be purchased where there is a significant community of people from its native Scotland. Innovative and sometimes controversial marketing campaigns have consistently kept it as one of the best-selling soft drinks in Scotland where it competes directly with massive global brands such as Coca-Cola and Pepsi. Like most leading soft drink brands, the product range has gradually been extended from the original drink to include "high energy" and low calorie versions.
Iron Port
Ironport is an old-fashioned carbonated soft drink from the early part of the 20th century that was served at soda fountains. It can still be found in parts of Utah, Southern Idaho, Western Wyoming, and Eastern Nevada. The flavor has been described as somewhat of a cross between root beer and Caribbean spices and is very similar to the Cuban soda pop, Iron Beer. It is rumored to have been named after Porter Rockwell.
Jones Limited Edition Soda
In 2004, it offered a complete, drinkable Thanksgiving dinner—five bottles—as a box set for $16. Turkey & Gravy was brought back, and the rest of the flavors were unique to this offering: Green Bean Casserole, Cranberry, Mashed Potatoes with Butter, and Fruitcake. The limited edition pack sold out in under an hour, temporarily crashing the company's email and Internet servers. As in 2003, people resold some seasonal bottles on auction sites such as eBay, with bids reaching as high as $100 a pack. Jones Soda's profits in both years were donated to the charity, Toys for Tots. They have since released flavors like: Christmas Ham, Christmas Tree, Egg Nog, Latke, Applesauce, Chocolate Coins, Jelly Doughnut, Sweet Potato, Dinner Roll, Pea, Antacid, Wild Herb Stuffing, Pumpkin Pie, Brussels sprout, Smoked Salmon Pâté, Corn on the Cob, Broccoli Casserole,
Julmust
Julmust is a soft drink that is consumed mainly in Sweden and Norway around Christmas. 45 million litres of julmust are consumed during December (to be compared with roughly 9 million Swedes), which is around 50% of the total soft drink volume in December and 75% of the total yearly must sales.
Must is made of carbonated water, sugar, hop extract, malt extract, spices, caramel colouring, citric acid, and preservatives. The hops and malt extracts give the must a somewhat beer-like taste, but much sweeter and, since it is not fermented, it contains no alcohol. It can be aged provided it is stored in a glass bottle. Some people buy must in December only to store it a year before drinking it.
Kombucha
Kombucha is the Western name for sweetened tea or tisane that has been fermented using a macroscopic solid mass of microorganisms called a "kombucha colony". (In other words, it is a fungus tea.)
Laranjada
Laranjada is a type of carbonated soft drink with an orange flavour, which is sold in Bars, Restaurants & supermarkets all over the island of Madeira. It is produced and distributed by the Empresa de Cervejas da Madeira, which is owned by the Pestana Group. Laranjada is 14 years older than the original and now famous Coca-Cola drink.
Milkis
Milkis is a soft drink produced by Lotte Chilsung, a Korean beverage company. It combines many of the common elements of traditional carbonated beverages such as corn syrup, sugar, and carbonated water with milk to create a creamy taste; its label proclaims "New feeling of soda beverage". In Russia, Milkis is available in orange, strawberry, mango, muskmelon and classic (regular) flavors. It was a highly popular drink in the early 1990s. Since then, its popularity has declined but it remains widely available.
NEEDS Cheese Drink
The new cheese drink comes in 3 different flavors; plain, blueberry, and yuzu citrus. They use a special process to cut down on the sweet taste of the flavored drinks. It is said to have a taste similar to yogurt, but with a cheesy aftertaste. An official from the NEEDS cheese factory says,
"We want consumers to be more familiar with cheese, so we’ve made a liquid version that makes it more accessible. It’s also good as a salad dressing."
Pakola
Pakola is a line of fruit flavored soft drinks, originally introduced in Pakistan in 1950 by Haji Ali Muhammad. It is produced by Mehran Bottlers (Pvt) Ltd. It is the first nationally branded soft drink of Pakistan. Hence its name Pakola meaning 'Cola of Pakistan.' The original green color Pakola ice cream soda is still popular in Pakistan. However, other Pakola flavours, like Pakola Lychee, have gained popularity. Another famous type of Pakola is Pakola Orange, which is an orange soda with an ice cream taste.
Passiona
Passiona is a passion fruit-flavoured soft drink available only in Australia and manufactured by Cadbury plc.
Pepsi White
The flavor of Pepsi White is lighter than tradition Pepsi. Japan marketing News reports that it has a sweeter, yogurt sort of flavor.
Placenta 400000
From Nihon Shokuten's line of placenta products, comes this drink made of swine placenta. All in the name of beauty.
Ramune
Despite the unique design of the bottle, the Ramune flavour is quite conventional, similar to many other carbonated lemon-lime soft drinks. The word 'ramune' is derived phonetically from the English 'lemonade'. Both fizzy lemonade and the unique bottles were imported from the United Kingdom at the same time, becoming associated with each other. In America, Ramune is often sold at conventions, certain Suncoast outlets, Borders, BevMo!, and Asian speciality stores.
There are other flavours of the drink, including: pineapple, kiwifruit, melon, strawberry, orange, lychee, Blue Hawaii, peach, wasabi (available at Tokyu Hands), Kimchi, bubble gum, octopus, mango, raspberry and curry. (Seriously?)
Rooh Afza
Rooh Afza is a popular concentrated sharbat invented by Hakeem Ustad Hasan and manufactured by the companies he founded, Hamdard (Wakf) Laboratories, India and Hamdard (Waqf) Laboratories, Pakistan, since 1907. Its original formulation included:
Herbs: Khurfa Seeds, Kasni, Munaqqa, Nilofar, Gaozaban, Hara Dhania (cilantro)
Fruits: orange, pineapple, carrot and watermelon,
Vegetables: spinach, mint and hara ghia (Luffa cylindrica)
Flowers:Rose and Keora, lemon and orange,
Roots: 'khas' (Vetiveria zizanioides)
The modern formulation in Pakistan is less complex. Rooh Afza is said to be a great alternative for chocolate milk. It is often mixed with milk and ice. Sometimes people make it with ice cream, 7up, and Coke. Rooh Afza is traditionally made in preparation for breaking the fast during Ramadan the holy month of fasting for Muslims. It's most commonly used to make a refreshing drink, just by adding water and sugar.
Sarsi
Sarsi is a sarsaparilla-based soft drink sold in Australia, the Philippines and other Southeast Asian countries.
Senzao
Made with guaraná, a fruit that grows only in Brazil, SENZAO is a carbonated soft drink with the spirit of Carnivál and the sensuality of the Brazilian people. Available in Mexico, Norway and Sweden.
Soda Sua Hot Ga
Soda sữa hột gà, also known as egg soda, is a sweet drink made from egg yolk, sweetened condensed milk, and club soda. The beverage is of Vietnamese origin, though it is also consumed in Cambodia.
Tamla Village's Manuel Saem
Garlic, which served as a source of strength to build the ancient Egyptian pyramids, contains allicin with protein and allinase as an enzyme to decompose alliyn. Since it makes nutritious elements alive and gets rid of a disgusting smell, it is good for people`s health. Tamlamaneul Saem was designated a traditional food drink by the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry in 1997. The raw material to make this drink is extracted from garlic and then concentrated.
Ting
Ting is a carbonated beverage popular in the Caribbean. It is flavored with St. Kitt's or Jamaican grapefruit juice (from concentrate), and is both tart and sweet. Ting comes in a green glass bottle, or more rarely in a green and yellow can. Like Orangina, the beverage contains a small amount of sediment consisting of grapefruit juice pulp. Ting is produced under license by Cott Beverages.
Unagi Nobori
A canned drink called "Unagi Nobori," or "Surging Eel," made by Japan Tobacco Inc., hit the nation's stores this month just ahead of Japan's annual eel-eating season, company spokesman Kazunori Hayashi said Monday. "It's mainly for men who are exhausted by the summer's heat," Hayashi said of the beverage, believed to be the first mass-produced eel drink in Japan. Many Japanese believe eating eel boosts stamina in hot weather.
Vinea
Vinea is a carbonated grape-based soft drink invented in Czechoslovakia in the 1973 by Slovak Ján Farkaš, a biochemist working for the Research Institute for Viticulture and Wine-making in Bratislava. The production begin in the 1974. After years of trademark ownership disputes, Vinea was sold to Kofola in January 2008.
Zam Zam Cola
It is particularly popular in Iran and parts of the Arab World, having gained a cult status there as a Muslim alternative to "Western" products such as Coca-Cola and Pepsi. Zam Zam is also one of the few remaining soda companies in Iran that uses refilled glass bottles.
List of soft drinks by country
What is a soft drink?:
A soft drink is a beverage that does not contain alcohol; generally it is also implied that the drink does not contain milk or other dairy products and that it is drunk cold. Carbonated soft drinks are commonly known as pop, soda pop, soda, cola, coke or tonic in various parts of the United States, pop in Canada, fizzy drinks, pop or soft drinks in the United Kingdom and Australia[1] and sometimes minerals in Ireland. The adjective soft specifies a lack of alcohol by way of contrast to the term "hard drink". The word drink, while nominally neutral, sometimes carries connotations of alcoholic content. Beverages like colas, flavored water, sparkling water, iced tea, sweet tea, lemonade, squash, and fruit punch are among the most common types of soft drinks, while hot chocolate, hot tea, coffee, milk, tap water, juice and milkshakes do not fall into this classification. Many carbonated soft drinks are optionally available in versions sweetened with sugars or with non-caloric sweeteners.
Almdudler
Almdudler is the brand name of a popular Austrian soft drink. The original Almdudler is a sweetened carbonated beverage flavored with herbs; its flavor is similar to ginger ale or elderflower cordial but with a somewhat stronger and more complex flavor. Almdudler has been called the "national drink of Austria". Its popularity in Austria is second only to Coca Cola; 80 million liters of the beverage are produced yearly.
Appletiser
Appletiser was invented in 1966 by entrepreneur apple farmer Edmond Lombardi in the fruit-growing Elgin Valley of South Africa. Using a secret blend of six different varieties of apples balanced for flavor and smell, with a bit of carbonation, but no sweeteners or preservatives. Within three years of its introduction Appletiser was already being exported to other African countries, England and Asia. In its earliest years the company made distribution deals with Coca-Cola, which later purchased a 50% share of Appletiser in 1979.
Beed Cola
Beed Cola is a Peruvian range of soft drinks. Beed Cola is produced in Pucallpa, Peru and sold throughout the Ucayali Region. Beed Cola is sold in glass bottles of 362 ml.
Beverly
Beverly is a carbonated soft drink often consumed as a non-alcoholic apéritif made by the The Coca-Cola Company and sold in Italy. The drink's distinctive bitter flavor (sometimes described as grapefruit-like) is due to quinine[1]. Quinine is also a key ingredient of tonic water, which is another soft drink noted for a bitter flavor.
Calpis
Calpis is a Japanese uncarbonated soft drink, manufactured by Calpis Co., Ltd., headquartered in Shibuya, Tokyo. The beverage has a light, somewhat milky, and slightly acidic flavor, similar to plain or vanilla-flavored yogurt or Yakult. It's ingredients include water, nonfat dry milk and lactic acid, and is produced by lactic acid fermentation.
Cheerwine
Cheerwine is a soft drink produced by the Carolina Beverage Corporation of Salisbury, North Carolina. It has been produced since 1917. Notable for its fairly unusual "cherry taste and rich burgundy color," Cheerwine has a very sweet cherry flavor and an unusually high degree of carbonation compared with many other soft drinks. Named for both its color and taste the company website explains that “it made sense to name a burgundy-red, bubbly, cherry concoction—Cheerwine." The "Retro Cheerwine" variant is sold in glass bottles and is sweetened with cane sugar instead of high-fructose corn syrup.
Cola Lacaye
Cola Lacaye is a Haitian soft drink founded by Rigobert Richardson in 1977. Today, Cola Lacaye soda is manufactured and distributed by The Brooklyn Bottling Group, which manufactures, distributes, imports various Caribbean-based soft drinks and food. Cola Lacaye comes in three island flavors; Fruit Cola, Fruit Champagne and Banana. Cola Lacaye has become part of the Haitian American cultural dining experience.
Coolpis Kimchee Drink
Kimchi is a traditional Korean side dish composed mainly of fermented spicy cabbage. The Kimchee Drink is the packaged, cloudy juice left from the fermentation process.
Dr. Brown's Cel-Ray
Dr Brown's Cel-Ray soda is a soft drink with a celery flavor. It is fairly easy to find in New York City and in South Florida. Outside the New York City region, it is rather obscure but can sometimes be found at Jewish delicatessens and restaurants. In addition, it can be found at certain grocers that specialize in American food in Israel, and other specialty grocers. The flavor is reminiscent of ginger ale, but with a more pronounced celery flavor that is more pungent or peppery, derived from celery seed extract.
Dandelion and burdock
Dandelion and burdock is a traditional British soft drink, drunk in the British Isles since about 1265. Traditionally it is made from fermented dandelion and burdock (Arctium lappa) roots, and is naturally fizzy.
Guaraná Jesus
Guaraná Jesus is a Brazilian soft drink produced by bv0, a Coca-Cola bottler based in São Luís. The drink is popular within the region, reportedly outselling Coca-Cola, and is made from extracts of the guarana plant, which contains caffeine, theophylline, and theobromine. Lago has noted that "Every Brazilian knows that guarana is a stimulant and that means it stimulates everything". The drink is named for Jesus Norberto Gomes, the druggist who formulated the drink in 1920. The drink has a pink color, a cinnamon aroma and a very sweet taste, and is marketed with the slogan "the pink dream". The drink is now a brand owned by the Coca-Cola Company.
Irn-Bru
Irn-Bru (pronounced iron brew) is a popular carbonated soft drink produced in Scotland where it has been made by A.G. Barr, of Glasgow for more than a century. In addition to being sold throughout the United Kingdom, Barr's Irn-Bru is also available in many key markets throughout the world and can usually be purchased where there is a significant community of people from its native Scotland. Innovative and sometimes controversial marketing campaigns have consistently kept it as one of the best-selling soft drinks in Scotland where it competes directly with massive global brands such as Coca-Cola and Pepsi. Like most leading soft drink brands, the product range has gradually been extended from the original drink to include "high energy" and low calorie versions.
Iron Port
Ironport is an old-fashioned carbonated soft drink from the early part of the 20th century that was served at soda fountains. It can still be found in parts of Utah, Southern Idaho, Western Wyoming, and Eastern Nevada. The flavor has been described as somewhat of a cross between root beer and Caribbean spices and is very similar to the Cuban soda pop, Iron Beer. It is rumored to have been named after Porter Rockwell.
Jones Limited Edition Soda
In 2004, it offered a complete, drinkable Thanksgiving dinner—five bottles—as a box set for $16. Turkey & Gravy was brought back, and the rest of the flavors were unique to this offering: Green Bean Casserole, Cranberry, Mashed Potatoes with Butter, and Fruitcake. The limited edition pack sold out in under an hour, temporarily crashing the company's email and Internet servers. As in 2003, people resold some seasonal bottles on auction sites such as eBay, with bids reaching as high as $100 a pack. Jones Soda's profits in both years were donated to the charity, Toys for Tots. They have since released flavors like: Christmas Ham, Christmas Tree, Egg Nog, Latke, Applesauce, Chocolate Coins, Jelly Doughnut, Sweet Potato, Dinner Roll, Pea, Antacid, Wild Herb Stuffing, Pumpkin Pie, Brussels sprout, Smoked Salmon Pâté, Corn on the Cob, Broccoli Casserole,
Julmust
Julmust is a soft drink that is consumed mainly in Sweden and Norway around Christmas. 45 million litres of julmust are consumed during December (to be compared with roughly 9 million Swedes), which is around 50% of the total soft drink volume in December and 75% of the total yearly must sales.
Must is made of carbonated water, sugar, hop extract, malt extract, spices, caramel colouring, citric acid, and preservatives. The hops and malt extracts give the must a somewhat beer-like taste, but much sweeter and, since it is not fermented, it contains no alcohol. It can be aged provided it is stored in a glass bottle. Some people buy must in December only to store it a year before drinking it.
Kombucha
Kombucha is the Western name for sweetened tea or tisane that has been fermented using a macroscopic solid mass of microorganisms called a "kombucha colony". (In other words, it is a fungus tea.)
Laranjada
Laranjada is a type of carbonated soft drink with an orange flavour, which is sold in Bars, Restaurants & supermarkets all over the island of Madeira. It is produced and distributed by the Empresa de Cervejas da Madeira, which is owned by the Pestana Group. Laranjada is 14 years older than the original and now famous Coca-Cola drink.
Milkis
Milkis is a soft drink produced by Lotte Chilsung, a Korean beverage company. It combines many of the common elements of traditional carbonated beverages such as corn syrup, sugar, and carbonated water with milk to create a creamy taste; its label proclaims "New feeling of soda beverage". In Russia, Milkis is available in orange, strawberry, mango, muskmelon and classic (regular) flavors. It was a highly popular drink in the early 1990s. Since then, its popularity has declined but it remains widely available.
NEEDS Cheese Drink
The new cheese drink comes in 3 different flavors; plain, blueberry, and yuzu citrus. They use a special process to cut down on the sweet taste of the flavored drinks. It is said to have a taste similar to yogurt, but with a cheesy aftertaste. An official from the NEEDS cheese factory says,
"We want consumers to be more familiar with cheese, so we’ve made a liquid version that makes it more accessible. It’s also good as a salad dressing."
Pakola
Pakola is a line of fruit flavored soft drinks, originally introduced in Pakistan in 1950 by Haji Ali Muhammad. It is produced by Mehran Bottlers (Pvt) Ltd. It is the first nationally branded soft drink of Pakistan. Hence its name Pakola meaning 'Cola of Pakistan.' The original green color Pakola ice cream soda is still popular in Pakistan. However, other Pakola flavours, like Pakola Lychee, have gained popularity. Another famous type of Pakola is Pakola Orange, which is an orange soda with an ice cream taste.
Passiona
Passiona is a passion fruit-flavoured soft drink available only in Australia and manufactured by Cadbury plc.
Pepsi White
The flavor of Pepsi White is lighter than tradition Pepsi. Japan marketing News reports that it has a sweeter, yogurt sort of flavor.
Placenta 400000
From Nihon Shokuten's line of placenta products, comes this drink made of swine placenta. All in the name of beauty.
Ramune
Despite the unique design of the bottle, the Ramune flavour is quite conventional, similar to many other carbonated lemon-lime soft drinks. The word 'ramune' is derived phonetically from the English 'lemonade'. Both fizzy lemonade and the unique bottles were imported from the United Kingdom at the same time, becoming associated with each other. In America, Ramune is often sold at conventions, certain Suncoast outlets, Borders, BevMo!, and Asian speciality stores.
There are other flavours of the drink, including: pineapple, kiwifruit, melon, strawberry, orange, lychee, Blue Hawaii, peach, wasabi (available at Tokyu Hands), Kimchi, bubble gum, octopus, mango, raspberry and curry. (Seriously?)
Rooh Afza
Rooh Afza is a popular concentrated sharbat invented by Hakeem Ustad Hasan and manufactured by the companies he founded, Hamdard (Wakf) Laboratories, India and Hamdard (Waqf) Laboratories, Pakistan, since 1907. Its original formulation included:
Herbs: Khurfa Seeds, Kasni, Munaqqa, Nilofar, Gaozaban, Hara Dhania (cilantro)
Fruits: orange, pineapple, carrot and watermelon,
Vegetables: spinach, mint and hara ghia (Luffa cylindrica)
Flowers:Rose and Keora, lemon and orange,
Roots: 'khas' (Vetiveria zizanioides)
The modern formulation in Pakistan is less complex. Rooh Afza is said to be a great alternative for chocolate milk. It is often mixed with milk and ice. Sometimes people make it with ice cream, 7up, and Coke. Rooh Afza is traditionally made in preparation for breaking the fast during Ramadan the holy month of fasting for Muslims. It's most commonly used to make a refreshing drink, just by adding water and sugar.
Sarsi
Sarsi is a sarsaparilla-based soft drink sold in Australia, the Philippines and other Southeast Asian countries.
Senzao
Made with guaraná, a fruit that grows only in Brazil, SENZAO is a carbonated soft drink with the spirit of Carnivál and the sensuality of the Brazilian people. Available in Mexico, Norway and Sweden.
Soda Sua Hot Ga
Soda sữa hột gà, also known as egg soda, is a sweet drink made from egg yolk, sweetened condensed milk, and club soda. The beverage is of Vietnamese origin, though it is also consumed in Cambodia.
Tamla Village's Manuel Saem
Garlic, which served as a source of strength to build the ancient Egyptian pyramids, contains allicin with protein and allinase as an enzyme to decompose alliyn. Since it makes nutritious elements alive and gets rid of a disgusting smell, it is good for people`s health. Tamlamaneul Saem was designated a traditional food drink by the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry in 1997. The raw material to make this drink is extracted from garlic and then concentrated.
Ting
Ting is a carbonated beverage popular in the Caribbean. It is flavored with St. Kitt's or Jamaican grapefruit juice (from concentrate), and is both tart and sweet. Ting comes in a green glass bottle, or more rarely in a green and yellow can. Like Orangina, the beverage contains a small amount of sediment consisting of grapefruit juice pulp. Ting is produced under license by Cott Beverages.
Unagi Nobori
A canned drink called "Unagi Nobori," or "Surging Eel," made by Japan Tobacco Inc., hit the nation's stores this month just ahead of Japan's annual eel-eating season, company spokesman Kazunori Hayashi said Monday. "It's mainly for men who are exhausted by the summer's heat," Hayashi said of the beverage, believed to be the first mass-produced eel drink in Japan. Many Japanese believe eating eel boosts stamina in hot weather.
Vinea
Vinea is a carbonated grape-based soft drink invented in Czechoslovakia in the 1973 by Slovak Ján Farkaš, a biochemist working for the Research Institute for Viticulture and Wine-making in Bratislava. The production begin in the 1974. After years of trademark ownership disputes, Vinea was sold to Kofola in January 2008.
Zam Zam Cola
It is particularly popular in Iran and parts of the Arab World, having gained a cult status there as a Muslim alternative to "Western" products such as Coca-Cola and Pepsi. Zam Zam is also one of the few remaining soda companies in Iran that uses refilled glass bottles.
List of soft drinks by country
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