Free Unlimited Soft Drink Locations

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Free Unlimited Soft Drink Locations 2018 Free Unlimited Soft Drinks? Really! Find your favorite flavors in the Restaurant and Oasis locations listed below. Water is also available at all locations. Kringle’s Kafé – Christmas: • Pepsi • Dr Pepper • Sierra Mist • Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi • Diet Dr Pepper • Mug Root Beer • Mountain Dew • Tropicana Pink Lemonade • Gatorade Orange • Diet Mountain Dew • Big Red • Lipton Juicy Peach Tea Santa’s Snacks – Christmas: • Pepsi • Diet Mountain Dew • Sierra Mist • Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi • Dr Pepper • Mug Root Beer • Mountain Dew • Tropicana Pink Lemonade The Alamo – 4th of July: • Pepsi • Diet Mountain Dew • Sierra Mist • Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi • Dr Pepper • Mug Root Beer • Wild Cherry Pepsi • Tropicana Pink Lemonade • Gatorade Orange • Mountain Dew • Big Red George’s Gluten-Free Pizza & Snacks – 4th of July: • Pepsi • Diet Mountain Dew • Gatorade Fruit Punch • Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi • Dr Pepper • Gatorade Orange • Mountain Dew • Sierra Mist • Lipton Juicy Peach Tea Hot Diggity Dogs – 4th of July (Holidog’s FunTown): • Pepsi • Tropicana Pink Lemonade • Mug Root Beer • Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi • Big Red • Gatorade Fruit Punch • Mountain Dew • Sierra Mist Raging Rapids Oasis – 4th of July: • Pepsi • Dr Pepper • Gatorade Fruit Punch • Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi • Tropicana Pink Lemonade • Gatorade Orange • Mountain Dew • Sierra Mist • Lipton Juicy Peach Tea • Diet Mountain Dew • Mug Root Beer This listing is for the 2018 Season. Flavors and locations are subject to change. 2018 Rough Riders Oasis – 4th of July: • Pepsi • Dr Pepper • Gatorade Fruit Punch • Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi • Tropicana Pink Lemonade • Gatorade Orange • Mountain Dew • Sierra Mist • Lipton Juicy Peach Tea • Diet Mountain Dew • Mug Root Beer Sweet Stuff – 4th of July: • Pepsi • Dr Pepper • Mug Root Beer • Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi • Tropicana Pink Lemonade • Gatorade Fruit Punch • Mountain Dew • Big Red Goblin Burgers – Halloween: • Pepsi • Mountain Dew • Big Red • Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi • Dr Pepper • Sierra Mist • Wild Cherry Pepsi • Tropicana Pink Lemonade • Gatorade Fruit Punch Legend Oasis – Halloween: • Pepsi • Dr Pepper • Gatorade Fruit Punch • Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi • Tropicana Pink Lemonade • Gatorade Orange • Mountain Dew • Sierra Mist • Lipton Juicy Peach Tea • Diet Mountain Dew • Mug Root Beer Plymouth Rock Café – Thanksgiving: • Pepsi • Diet Mountain Dew • Sierra Mist • Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi • Dr Pepper • Mug Root Beer • Wild Cherry Pepsi • Tropicana Pink Lemonade • Gatorade Orange • Mountain Dew • Big Red • Lipton Juicy Peach Tea The SnackHouse – Thanksgiving (Thunderbird Plaza): • Pepsi • Diet Mountain Dew • Sierra Mist • Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi • Dr Pepper • Mug Root Beer • Wild Cherry Pepsi • Tropicana Pink Lemonade • Gatorade Orange • Mountain Dew • Big Red • Lipton Raspberry Tea This listing is for the 2018 Season. Flavors and locations are subject to change. 2018 Voyage Oasis – Thanksgiving: • Pepsi • Dr Pepper • Gatorade Fruit Punch • Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi • Tropicana Pink Lemonade • Gatorade Orange • Mountain Dew • Sierra Mist • Lipton Juicy Peach Tea • Diet Mountain Dew • Mug Root Beer Bahari Snacks – Splashin’ Safari: • Pepsi • Diet Mountain Dew • Sierra Mist • Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi • Dr Pepper • Mug Root Beer • Wild Cherry Pepsi • Tropicana Pink Lemonade • Gatorade Orange • Mountain Dew • Big Red • Lipton Raspberry Tea Bakuli Oasis – Splashin’ Safari: • Pepsi • Dr Pepper • Gatorade Fruit Punch • Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi • Tropicana Pink Lemonade • Gatorade Orange • Mountain Dew • Sierra Mist • Lipton Juicy Peach Tea • Diet Mountain Dew • Mug Root Beer Hyena Falls Oasis – Splashin’ Safari: • Pepsi • Dr Pepper • Gatorade Fruit Punch • Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi • Tropicana Pink Lemonade • Gatorade Orange • Mountain Dew • Sierra Mist • Lipton Raspberry Tea • Diet Mountain Dew • Mug Root Beer Jungle Jake’s – Splashin’ Safari: • Pepsi • Diet Mountain Dew • Sierra Mist • Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi • Dr Pepper • Mug Root Beer • Wild Cherry Pepsi • Tropicana Pink Lemonade • Gatorade Orange • Mountain Dew • Big Red • Lipton Juicy Peach Tea The Wave Oasis – Splashin’ Safari: • Pepsi • Dr Pepper • Gatorade Fruit Punch • Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi • Tropicana Pink Lemonade • Gatorade Orange • Mountain Dew • Sierra Mist • Lipton Juicy Peach Tea • Diet Mountain Dew • Mug Root Beer This listing is for the 2018 Season. Flavors and locations are subject to change. 2018 Wildebeestro – Splashin’ Safari: • Pepsi • Diet Mountain Dew • Sierra Mist • Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi • Dr Pepper • Mug Root Beer • Wild Cherry Pepsi • Tropicana Pink Lemonade • Gatorade Orange • Mountain Dew • Big Red • Lipton Juicy Peach Tea ZOOMbabwe Oasis – Splashin’ Safari: • Pepsi • Dr Pepper • Gatorade Fruit Punch • Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi • Tropicana Pink Lemonade • Gatorade Orange • Mountain Dew • Sierra Mist • Lipton Juicy Peach Tea • Diet Mountain Dew • Mug Root Beer ZOOMbabwe Indoor Dining Oasis – Splashin’ Safari: • Pepsi • Dr Pepper • Gatorade Fruit Punch • Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi • Tropicana Pink Lemonade • Gatorade Orange • Mountain Dew • Sierra Mist • Lipton Juicy Peach Tea • Diet Mountain Dew • Mug Root Beer This listing is for the 2018 Season. Flavors and locations are subject to change. .
Recommended publications
  • Mountain Dew a Day
    Aug. 27, 2000--- MILLERSVILLE, Tenn.---- My friends think it's strange that I drink three or four cans of Diet Mountain Dew a day. Just imagine if I hoarded the hooch. I didn't realize Mountain Dew was such a hot collectible until I visited the Museum of Beverage Containers and Advertising and saw a special section called "The Hillbilly Display." That's the portion of the museum devoted to weird names like "Jake and Daisy Dew" and "One That's Able, Says Mable" that were printed on Mountain Dew bottles during the 1960s. Museum owner and curator Tom Bates says the names honor the folks who worked in the bottling plants, mostly in Iowa and North Carolina. They had throwback rural names to further flavor the impression that Mountain Dew_like moonshine_was distilled locally. "At one time we had 500 different names," Bates says during a museum tour. "I decided I didn't want to keep them all." Bates put some of his collection up for sale in the museum gift shop. I bought an empty 1965 "Zeke n' Daisy" 10-ounce bottle of Mountain Dew for $7. In exciting cursive, the back of the bottle promised, It'll Tickle Your Innards! Imagine some advertising bigwig proposing that slogan today to PepsiCo, which owns and operates Mountain Dew. Mountain Dew dates back to the early 1940s when brothers Ally and Barney Hartman of Knoxville, Tenn., were bottling a 7-Up type brew as their own mixer for hard liquor. They named the stuff "Mountain Dew" after Tennessee Mountain Moonshine. The mid-1960s bottles said the soft drink was "Made from flavors specially blended in the traditional hillbilly style." Hiccup! In 1946 Barney and Ally affixed a paper label to their brew showing a hillbilly toting a gun and a signature that said `By BARNEY and OLLIE' (they meant it to say ALLY).
    [Show full text]
  • Protein (G) Sodium (Mg) BRISK ICED TEA & LEMONADE 110 0 28 27 0 60
    ROUNDED NUTRITION INFORMATION FOR FOUNTAIN BEVERAGES Source: PepsiCoBeverageFacts.com [Last updated on January 11, 2017] Customer Name: GPM Investmments, LLC Other Identifier: Nutrition information assumes no ice. 20 Fluid Ounces with no ice. Total Carbohydrates Calories Total Fat (g) (g) Sugars (g) Protein (g) Sodium (mg) BRISK ICED TEA & LEMONADE 110 0 28 27 0 60 BRISK NO CALORIE PEACH ICED GREEN TEA 5 0 0 0 0 175 BRISK RASPBERRY ICED TEA 130 0 33 33 0 70 BRISK SWEET ICED TEA 130 0 36 36 0 80 BRISK UNSWEETENED NO LEMON ICED TEA 0 0 0 0 0 75 CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI 0 0 0 0 0 95 DIET MTN DEW 10 0 1 1 0 90 DIET PEPSI 0 0 0 0 0 95 G2 - FRUIT PUNCH 35 0 9 8 0 175 GATORADE FRUIT PUNCH 150 0 40 38 0 280 GATORADE LEMON-LIME 150 0 40 35 0 265 GATORADE ORANGE 150 0 40 38 0 295 LIPTON BREWED ICED TEA GREEN TEA WITH CITRUS 180 0 49 48 0 165 LIPTON BREWED ICED TEA SWEETENED 170 0 45 45 0 155 LIPTON BREWED ICED TEA UNSWEETENED 0 0 0 0 0 200 MIST TWST 260 0 68 68 0 55 MTN DEW 270 0 73 73 0 85 MTN DEW CODE RED 290 0 77 77 0 85 MTN DEW KICKSTART - BLACK CHERRY 110 0 27 26 0 90 MTN DEW KICKSTART - ORANGE CITRUS 100 0 27 25 0 95 MTN DEW PITCH BLACK 280 0 75 75 0 80 MUG ROOT BEER 240 0 65 65 0 75 PEPSI 250 0 69 69 0 55 PEPSI WILD CHERRY 260 0 70 70 0 50 SOBE LIFEWATER YUMBERRY POMEGRANATE - 0 CAL 0 0 0 0 0 80 TROPICANA FRUIT PUNCH (FTN) 280 0 75 75 0 60 TROPICANA LEMONADE (FTN) 260 0 67 67 0 260 TROPICANA PINK LEMONADE (FTN) 260 0 67 67 0 260 TROPICANA TWISTER SODA - ORANGE 290 0 76 76 0 60 FRUITWORKS BLUE RASPBERRY FREEZE 140 0 38 38 0 40 FRUITWORKS CHERRY FREEZE 150 0 40 40 0 45 MTN DEW FREEZE 150 0 41 41 0 45 PEPSI FREEZE 150 0 38 38 0 25 *Not a significant source of calories from fat, saturated fat, trans fat, cholesterol, or dietary fiber.
    [Show full text]
  • Caffeine, Energy Drinks, and Effects on the Body
    Caffeine, Energy Drinks, and Effects on the Body Source 1: "Medicines in My Home: Caffeine and Your Body" by the Food and Drug Administration Caffeine Content in Common Drinks and Foods (University of Washington) Item Item size Caffeine (mg) Coffee 150 ml (5 oz) 60–150 Coffee, decaf 150 ml (5 oz) 2–5 Tea 150 ml (5 oz) 40–80 Hot Cocoa 150 ml (5 oz) 1–8 Chocolate Milk 225 ml 2–7 Jolt Cola 12 oz 100 Josta 12 oz 58 Mountain Dew 12 oz 55 Surge 12 oz 51 Diet Coca Cola 12 oz 45 Coca Cola 12 oz 64 Coca Cola Classic 12 oz 23 Dr. Pepper 12 oz 61 Mello Yellow 12 oz 35 Mr. Pibb 12 oz 27 Pepsi Cola 12 oz 43 7-Up 12 oz 0 COPYRIGHT © 2015 by Vantage Learning. All Rights Reserved. No part of this work may be used, accessed, reproduced or distributed in any form or by any means or stored in a database or any retrieval system, without the prior written permission of Vantage Learning. Caffeine, Energy Drinks, and Effects on the Body Mug Root Beer 12 oz 0 Sprite 12 oz 0 Ben & Jerry's No Fat Coffee 1 cup 85 Fudge Frozen Yogurt Starbucks Coffee Ice Cream 1 cup 40–60 Dannon Coffee Yogurt 8 oz 45 100 Grand Bar 1 bar (43 g) 11.2 Krackel Bar 1 bar (47 g) 8.5 Peanut Butter Cup 1 pack (51 g) 5.6 Kit Kat Bar 1 bar (46 g) 5 Raisinets 10 pieces (10 g) 2.5 Butterfinger Bar 1 bar (61 g) 2.4 Baby Ruth Bar 1 bag (60 g) 2.4 Special Dark Chocolate Bar 1 bar (41 g) 31 Chocolate Brownie 1.25 oz 8 Chocolate Chip Cookie 30 g 3–5 Chocolate Ice Cream 50 g 2–5 Milk Chocolate 1 oz 1–15 Bittersweet Chocolate 1 oz 5–35 Source 3: Excerpt from "CAERS Adverse Events Reports Allegedly Related to 5 Hour Energy" by The Food and Drug Administration http://www.fda.gov/downloads/AboutFDA/CentersOffices/OfficeofFoods/CFSAN/CFSANFOIAElectron icReadingRoom/UCM328270.pdf Received Symptoms Outcomes Date ANAPHYLACTIC SHOCK, LIFE THREATENING, VISITED AN ER, URTICARIA, DYSPNOEA, VISITED A HEALTH CARE PROVIDER, 3/24/2011 LETHARGY, HYPERSOMNIA, OTHER SERIOUS (IMPORTANT MEDICAL ASTHENIA EVENTS) RENAL IMPAIRMENT, FOETAL LIFE THREATENING, CONGENITAL 4/21/2011 DISTRESS SYNDROME ANOMALY COPYRIGHT © 2015 by Vantage Learning.
    [Show full text]
  • NUTRITIONAL GUIDE January 2020
    NUTRITIONAL GUIDE January 2020 Nutritional and Calorie Guide Hot Food Items Bakery Items Fountain and Frozen Beverages Coffee Drinks The nutritional information is derived from a computer analysis of recipes with the assistance of an ESHA Research Nutrition Labeling and Formulation Software (Genesis R&D 9.11.0 Version), and standard supplier product formulations. The rounding of figures is based on the US Food and Drug Administration NLEA Guidelines. Variations within the nutritional values may occur due to the use of regional suppliers, manufacturing tolerances, minor differences in preparation techniques at the store level, recipe revisions, periodic product formulation changes and other factors. 3 11/01/2019 Table of Contents Hot Food Items 5 Bakery Items 14 Fountain & Frozen Beverages 22 Coffee Drinks 83 The nutritional information is derived from a computer analysis of recipes with the assistance of an ESHA Research Nutrition Labeling and Formulation Software (Genesis R&D 9.11.0 Version), and standard supplier product formulations. The rounding of figures is based on the US Food and Drug Administration NLEA Guidelines. Variations within the nutritional values may occur due to the use of regional suppliers, manufacturing tolerances, minor differences in preparation techniques at the store level, recipe revisions, periodic product formulation changes and other factors. 4 11/01/2019 NachoTaco Cheese Sauce Queso Blanco Cheese Sauce Ghels Chili Sauce 09/24/2019 09/24/2019 09/24/2019 Taco Cheese Sauce Queso Blanco Cheese Sauce Gehls Chili
    [Show full text]
  • CIR WP Energy Drinks 0113 CIR WP Energy Drinks 0113 1/28/13 2:19 PM Page 1
    CIR_WP_Energy Drinks_0113_CIR_WP_Energy Drinks_0113 1/28/13 2:19 PM Page 1 CIRCADIAN ® White Paper ENERGY DRINKS The Good, the Bad, and the Jittery Jena L. Pitman-Leung, Ph.D., Becca Chacko, & Andrew Moore-Ede 2 Main Street, Suite 310 Stoneham, MA 02180 USA tel 781-439-6300 fax 781-439-6399 [email protected] www.circadian.com CIR_WP_Energy Drinks_0113_CIR_WP_Energy Drinks_0113 1/28/13 2:19 PM Page 2 ENERGY DRINKS Introduction Energy drinks have become the new “go-to” source of caffeine in our 24/7 society, particularly for young people. Available nearly everywhere, affordable and conveniently packaged, energy drinks represent an apparently simple solution to the worldwide exhaustion epidemic. Yet despite their widespread consumption and popularity - sales in the United States reached over $10 billion in 2012 - many questions still remain about their safety and efficacy (Meier, January 2013). To start with, most energy drinks contain ingredients that consumers are not familiar with, and that haven’t been studied for safe consumption in a laboratory environment. The goal of this whitepaper is to provide background information on what makes energy drinks different from other common sources of caffeine, examine the ingredients that give energy drinks their “boost”, and identify best consumption practices and potential safety issues.* I. What Are Energy Drinks Anyway? You might say that energy drinks are the older, stronger, jock brother of caffeinated soft drinks. They share some similarities – both are typically carbonated, contain caffeine and sugar, and are available everywhere. However, the biggest difference between energy drinks and sodas is how they are classified by the United States Food & Drug Administration (FDA).
    [Show full text]
  • Offering More Beverage Choices with Zero Sugar Or Reduced Sugar
    How We’re Taking Action In 2014, PepsiCo joined forces with The Coca-Cola Company and Keurig Dr Pepper in a landmark agreement to decrease beverage calories in the American diet. Working alongside the Alliance for a Healthier Generation, the beverage industry set a goal to reduce beverage calories consumed per person nationally 20% by 2025. Here’s what we’re doing to make this goal a reality. Offering more beverage choices with zero sugar or reduced sugar From reformulating products to creating new ones to developing smaller sizes, we’re exploring all paths to bring consumers more choices. Driving availability and demand for zero sugar and reduced sugar beverages We’re creating consumer excitement by using big names and big venues to increase awareness and demand for lower calorie choices. Encouraging CALORIES90 consumers to make PER CAN CALORIES90 informed choices PER CAN We’ve put calorie awareness messages on vending machines and beverage coolers across the U.S. and CALORIES CALORIES calorie information on the front of all our packages. COUNT COUNT TRY A LOW-CAL BEVERAGE TRY A LOW-CAL BEVERAGE Offering more beverage choices with zero sugar or reduced sugar More 75+ 115+ 300+ beverages with new zero sugar and reduced beverages with 100 calories Choices zero sugar sugar beverages since 2014 or less per 12 oz serving Smaller 16 oz value cans: 12 oz sleek cans: a new look for the an alternative to single serving can Portions 20 oz bottles 7.5 oz mini cans: for consumers who want a little less Less G, G2 and G Zero: DEW Kickstart: Trop 50: Brisk and Lipton iced 3 calorie choices all with 70% less than 50% less than Tropicana teas and juice drinks: Sugar the same electrolytes MTN Dew 20-45% less after reformulation of These beverages all fl avors have less sugar than the originals: Driving availability and demand for zero sugar and reduced sugar beverages Our marketing programs are designed to boost consumer demand for reduced sugar and lower calorie choices, with a focus on fl avor, hydration and taste.
    [Show full text]
  • Tri R Coffee & Vending Product List
    Tri R Coffee & Vending Product List Cold Beverages Pepsi Snapple Juice Snapple Diet Pepsi Max Snapple Tea Snapple Lemon Pepsi Natural Dasani Water Snapple Pink Lemonade Pepsi One SoBe Energize Mango Melon Lipton Brisk Strawberry Melon Pepsi Throwback SoBe Energize Power Fruit Punch Lipton Brisk Sugar Free Lemonade Caffeine Free Pepsi SoBe Lean Fuji Apple Cranberry Lipton Brisk Sugar Free Orangeade Diet Pepsi SoBe Lean Honey Green Tea Lipton Brisk Sweet Iced Tea Diet Pepsi Lime SoBe Lean Raspberry Lemonade Lipton Diet Green Tea with Citrus Diet Pepsi Vanilla SoBe Lifewater Acai Fruit Punch Lipton Diet Green Tea with Mixed Berry Diet Pepsi Wild Cherry SoBe Lifewater Agave Lemonade Lipton Diet Iced Tea with Lemon Caffeine Free Diet Pepsi SoBe Lifewater B-Energy Black Cherry Dragonfruit Lipton Diet White Tea with Raspberry Sierra Mist Natural SoBe Lifewater B-Energy Strawberry Apricot Lipton Green Tea with Citrus Diet Sierra Mist SoBe Lifewater Black and Blue Berry Lipton Iced Tea Lemonade Sierra Mist Cranberry Splash SoBe Lifewater Blackberry Grape Lipton Iced Tea with Lemon Diet Sierra Mist Cranberry Splash SoBe Lifewater Cherimoya Punch Lipton PureLeaf - Diet Lemon Diet Sierra Mist Ruby Splash SoBe Lifewater Fuji Apple Pear Lipton PureLeaf - Extra Sweet Ocean Spray Apple Juice SoBe Lifewater Macintosh Apple Cherry Lipton PureLeaf - Green Tea with Honey Ocean Spray Blueberry Juice Cocktail SoBe Lifewater Mango Melon Lipton PureLeaf - Lemon Ocean Spray Cranberry Juice Cocktail SoBe Lifewater Orange Tangerine Lipton PureLeaf - Peach Ocean
    [Show full text]
  • Caffeine - Induced Psychiatric Disorders
    Article 353 1 Clock Hour Caffeine - Induced Psychiatric Disorders Francis M. Torres Caffeine is a bitter, white crystalline xanthine al- inability to quit or to cut down their caffeine use. The kaloid that acts as a psychoactive stimulant drug and a mood altering effects of caffeine depend on the mild diuretic1. In humans, caffeine is a central ner- amount of caffeine consumed and whether the indi- vous system (CNS) stimulant2, having the effect of vidual is physically dependent on or tolerant to caf- temporarily warding off drowsiness and restoring feine. In caffeine non-users or intermittent users, low alertness. Beverages containing caffeine, such as cof- dietary doses of caffeine (20-200 mg) generally pro- fee, tea, soft drinks and energy drinks, enjoy great duce positive mood effects such as increased well- popularity. Caffeine is the world’s most widely con- being, happiness, energetic arousal, alertness, and so- sumed psychoactive substance, estimated at 120,000 ciability. Among daily caffeine consumers, much of tonnes per annum3, but unlike many other psychoac- the positive mood effect experienced with consump- tive substances, it is legal and unregulated in nearly tion of caffeine in the morning after overnight absti- all jurisdictions. The half-life of caffeine — the time nence is due to suppression of low grade withdrawal required for the body to eliminate one-half of the total symptoms such as sleepiness and lethargy. Large caf- amount of caffeine — varies widely among individu- feine doses (200 mg or greater) may produce negative als according to such factors as age, liver function, mood effects. Although generally mild and brief, these pregnancy, some concurrent medications, and the effects include increased anxiety, nervousness, jitteri- level of enzymes in the liver needed for caffeine me- ness, and upset stomach.
    [Show full text]
  • Thirst for Innovation
    QUENCH YOUR THIRST FOR INNOVATION In a market like this, you need to operate at peak performance. Beverage processors need every advantage they can get. Today, your biggest opportunity lies in innovation. At the Worldwide Food Expo, you’ll see how new technologies can address today’s hot topics — from trends and ingredients to food safety, sustainability and how to “green” your operations and packaging. This is the one event that encompasses the entire dairy, food and beverage production process from beginning to end. So go ahead, quench your thirst and better your bottomline. WHERE THE DAIRY AND FOOD INDUSTRY COME TOGETHER OCTOBER 28–31, 2009 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS McCORMICK PLACE WWW.WORLDWIDEFOOD.COM MOVING AT THE SPEED OF INNOVATION REGISTER TODAY! USE PRIORITY CODE ASD08 Soft Drinks Internationa l – October 2009 ConTEnTS 1 news Europe 4 Africa 6 Middle East 8 The leading English language magazine published in Europe, devoted exclusively to the Asia Pacific 10 manufacture, distribution and marketing of soft drinks, fruit juices and bottled water. Americas 12 Ingredients 14 features Juices & Juice Drinks 18 Energy & Sports 20 Drinks With Attitude 26 The energy drinks caTegory conTinues Waters & Water Plus Drinks 22 To grow and boosTed by The inTroduc - Carbonates 23 Tion of innovaTion such as The energy shoT. Rob Walker gives his analysis. Building A Green Employment Brand 36 Packaging 46 User Friendly Fortification RecruiTing and reTaining like-minded Environment 48 employees can pay dividends, reporTs 28 MargueriTe GranaT. People On-Trend, producT innovaTion has 50 been made easier, according To Events 51 Glanbia NuTriTionals. Sincerity 38 Jo Jacobius Takes a look aT boTTled Bubbling Up 53 waTer producers who Truly Take Meeting The Challenge 30 environmenTal and susTainabiliTy Choosing The righT sweeTener sysTem issues To hearT.
    [Show full text]
  • Fluoride: the Natural State of Water
    Acid + Sugar = Trouble Did you know? Fluoride: The Nutrition Facts Regular Nutrition Facts Serv. Size, 1 Can (regular) pop Serv. Size, 1 Can (diet) contains • Amount per Serving Amount per Serving Soft drink companies pay school districts both sugar large royalties in exchange for the right to Calories 140 and acid Calories 0 Total Fat 0grams that can Total Fat 0 grams Natural State Sodium 50 mg Sodium 40 mg market their product exclusively in the lead to Total Carb 39 grams Total Carb 0 grams schools, which in turn boosts pop sales Sugars 39 grams tooth Protein 0 grams Protein 0 grams decay. among kids. Although Carbonated Water, diet pop is Caramel Color, Aspartame, Carbonated Water, High Phosphoric Acid, of Water • sugar free, American consumption of soft drinks, Fructose Corn Syrup, Potassium Benzoate (to it still including carbonated beverages, fruit and/or Sucrose, Caramel protect taste) Natural Color, Phosphoric Acid, contains Flavors, Citric Acid, juice and sports drinks increased by 500 Natural Flavors, Caffeine harmful Caffeine percent in the past 50 years. acid Acid Amount* Sugar Amount** • Americans drank more than 53 gallons of (low number = teaspoons soft drinks per person in 2000. This bad for teeth) per 12 ounces amount surpassed all other beverages. (1 can) One of every four beverages consumed Pure Water 7.00 0.0 today is a soft drink, which means other, Barq’s 4.61 10.7 more nutritious beverages are being Diet 7Up 3.67 0.0 displaced from the diet. Sprite 3.42 9.0 • Today, one fifth of all 1- to 2-year-old Diet Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • A Guide to the Soft Drink Industry Acknowledgments
    BREAKING DOWN THE CHAIN: A GUIDE TO THE SOFT DRINK INDUSTRY ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This report was developed to provide a detailed understanding of how the soft drink industry works, outlining the steps involved in producing, distributing, and marketing soft drinks and exploring how the industry has responded to recent efforts to impose taxes on sugar-sweetened beverages in particular. The report was prepared by Sierra Services, Inc., in collaboration with the Supply Chain Management Center (SCMC) at Rutgers University – Newark and New Brunswick. The authors wish to thank Kristen Condrat for her outstanding support in all phases of preparing this report, including literature review and identifying source documents, writing, data analysis, editing, and final review. Special thanks also goes to Susanne Viscarra, who provided copyediting services. Christine Fry, Carrie Spector, Kim Arroyo Williamson, and Ayela Mujeeb of ChangeLab Solutions prepared the report for publication. ChangeLab Solutions would like to thank Roberta Friedman of the Yale Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity for expert review. For questions or comments regarding this report, please contact the supervising professors: Jerome D. Williams, PhD Prudential Chair in Business and Research Director – The Center for Urban Entrepreneurship & Economic Development (CUEED), Rutgers Business School – Newark and New Brunswick, Management and Global Business Department 1 Washington Park – Room 1040 Newark, NJ 07102 Phone: 973-353-3682 Fax: 973-353-5427 [email protected] www.business.rutgers.edu/CUEED Paul Goldsworthy Senior Industry Project Manager Department of Supply Chain Management & Marketing Sciences Rutgers Business School Phone: 908-798-0908 [email protected] Design: Karen Parry | Black Graphics The National Policy & Legal Analysis Network to Prevent Childhood Obesity (NPLAN) is a project of ChangeLab Solutions.
    [Show full text]
  • Menupro 2013Diningmenu
    Appetizers New England Style Clam Chowder ... 4.95 5.95 Onion rings ..................................... 5.95 6.95 Made from scratch using a recipe dating back A heaping pile made fresh to order to 1872 Battered Mushrooms ...................... 5.95 6.95 Battered Beets ................................ 5.95 6.95 Mushrooms cut and lightly battered made Thin sliced beetroot in a light batter made fresh to order fresh to order Slitheen Fresh Garden Salad ................................. 4.95 Scotch Egg Salad .................................................... 8.95 with choice of ranch, blue cheese, honey A hard boiled egg wrapped in sausage meat, mustard, Italian, raspberry vinaigrette, coated in breadcrumbs and deep fried, then balsamic vinaigrette or thousand islands served on a garden salad. Main Catch Pollock ..................................................................................................................................................... 6.95 8.95 Cod Fish & Chips ...................................................................................................................................... 9.95 12.95 Red Snapper Fish & Chips ........................................................................................................................ 9.95 12.95 Haddock Fish & Chips .............................................................................................................................. 9.95 12.95 Halibut Fish & Chips ...........................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]