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Cheap test strip that measures the syrup content of soda fountain drinks. You get a drink these days that has a whole lot of ice and carbonated water in it, and just barely tastes like a coke or pepsi, just a fizzy something or other. These big chains probably multiply X amount of outlets by X amount
of syrup per drink and have the ratios all figured out. There ought to be standards, complain to the manager, "Hey, what's this, 1/2 of 1% syrup? I can barely taste It."
A bit about calibration
http://www.boneville.net/soda/brix.htm "Here is a basic brix cup. The left side is the 5:1 ratio, the right side is the 5.5:1 ratio. The center holds the soda. Notice how the diameter of all three is different. If you were to draw a solid line at 5 oz on the soda cup, then filled all three cups to this same line, you would have 5 oz of soda, 1 oz of syrup in the left cup, and 0.90 oz of soda in the right cup." [half, Oct 04 2004, last modified Oct 21 2004]
[link]
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If there's not enough flavoring, we send the drink back. You don't need a test strip for that. |
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(Bizarrely, Mountain Dew recently managed to ship a whole batch of cans to NYC with only bubbles, and no flavoring or color. And no, it was not an improvement.) |
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Homer: "What do you have to drink?"
Street Vendor: "We have Mountain Dew and Crab juice."
Homer: "Eeewww, I'll take the Crab juice." |
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[DrCurry]: 1)Get more of those defective Mountain Dews
2) Wait five years
3) Sell on E-bay as collectors items |
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ty6, if the soda is weak, or, conversely, syrupy, commas flow like bubbles, then someone has to change the tank. |
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I work for one of these soft drink companies and can confirm that we constantly check the syrup content of our drinks through fountain machines and make the necessary adjustments. |
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Its actually quite difficult for the retailer to make changes to the ratios - which ensures that you, the customer, gets the perfect serve. |
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If you find a drink thats too sweet (too much syrup), or too watery, then I suggest you complain. |
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me too, but in what circumstances? |
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pepsi vanilla, current favourite. |
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jutta: a similar though occurred to to me, but if people can't tell the difference by taste, how could they have a strong brand preference? |
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another hb mystery - cannot wait for answers - shut up DC <grin> |
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I'll buy a Coke before a Pepsi, but I'm sure I couldn't tell the difference in a blind taste test. It's just one of those things, I guess. |
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A little transatlantic clarification please: What is a soda fountain? Is it (a) a post mix soft drink delivery system, like the cup filling ones at cinemas and suchlike (b) a great big ornamental fountain spewing luminous carbonated sugar water into the air, speckling passers by with sticky juice (c) neither of the above or (d) all of the above? |
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It's actually just a place that serves soda and sundaes, etc. |
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Though I guess it could also refer to the machinery for delivering the soda, especially in the context used here. Many, if not most, bars now use soda guns, that dispense a variety of sodas depending on which button you press. In the back somewhere, there is a device with cartridges for the different flavors. When the cartridges run out, all you get is soda water. |
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<aside> Apologies if this is an already well known factoid, but does anyone know the difference between Diet Pepsi and Pepsi Max? Apparently it is that young Males won't buy something with "Diet" on the label. |
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Yep - diet's for girls, demographically speaking. |
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I was hoping this was what [jutta] said. Because, yes, you
can taste the difference between them if you have a
preference, but if you want to complain when you know
they pulled a switcheroo, you have to have the facts to
back you up, cause if that waiter was rude enough to lie
to you in the first place, then they'll likely put up a fight
if you try to complain, and if you try to get in the kitchen
for a look yourself, they'll sick the cook on you, which
ain't going to be fun, except for the rest of us. |
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Phase 1: place tooth in glass of Coke/Pepsi. |
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Phase 2: leave overnight. |
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Phase 3: observe glass in morning. |
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Phase 4: empty glass, clean, fill with non-carbonated beverage, consume. |
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Didn't mention your mouth, [TomBomb]... |
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//you have to have the facts to back you up// Exactly. This idea is about specifications. There's a prescribed ratio [thanks for the link, half!], but it's not used, for various reasons. When you get a lousy soda, you know many people before you have complained about it. I found one restaurant that will give you a Coke in a can - their fountain is never right. What about having Coca-Cola Deliciousness scored in the Restaurant Inspection Report posted by the door? |
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This idea has more potential than just deciding if Pepsi OK.
There should be a simple way for the average Joe to find (and dictate) the specs of everyday products & services, particularly when it comes to repairs: --The offices Tech Team should set your workstation monitors refresh rate to something other than the default 60hz, to avoid flickering & eyestrain. But if you mention it hell say I dont see a problem
--The phone company says it sounds fine to me when you have line noise. But they have a full range of specs, and if followed, your modem would work flawlessly. --The sound crew at the rock concert has lost their hearing. So the high-pitched treble hiss sounds OK to them. It would sound so much better without the hiss. |
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If enough people complained perhaps a soda war could break out. Percentages would be used in advertising: Now offering a whopping 10% syrup in all our sodas! |
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[admin: removed full stop/period from title. OK, so I'm in a fussy mood.] |
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