Thursday, May 07, 2026

An Explosion of Coke (not that kind of coke)

I mentioned Coke, specifically the caffeine and sugar free variety recently, and that got me reminiscing.

My grandkids don't like pop. Factually, I am the only one in my family to like the stuff. Good for all of them, and bad for me. Taste is such a variable thing. I don't know why I like what I do, nor why others don't like what I like, and vice versa, of course.

I've always liked it. My first remembered tasting is that, when I was about 5 years old, someone jettisoned a bottle of cream soda on our lawn. It was capped and unused. I brought it into mother who acted as my protective taste-tester. She affirmed the drink and let me drink the rest. What a treat!

When I was a little older, Mom and I would sometimes go for a walk on a Sunday evening when dad was at church. It seems to me that we would often pick up a bottle of Kik Cola (a local Montreal brand back then). I looked forward to that.

In high school, a friend and I would walk to the variety store almost every day after school and before the buses came to take us home. It was Coke in a bottle back then — the real thing as in the old commercials. I can still sing that commercial. (I searched for it, but I cannot find the specific version that I recall.)

It's the real thing
In the back of your mind
What you're hoping to find
Etc

At some point in time around middle age, I switched to Diet Coke and now prefer that taste to Coke Classic. I would take several cans to school (work) every day. While I could have purchased cans at school, bringing them and keeping them in our department fridge was much less expensive. I didn't drink coffee in those days, not until near the end of my career, so Coke was my source of external stimulation.

I still drink Diet Coke, usually two cans in the afternoon and perhaps a Caff in the evening.

I do know it isn't exactly a healthy drink, but there is something about how it feels on my throat that is quite wonderful, and nothing else, not even other sorts of soft drinks, feels the same. The effect on my gullet is quite wonderful.

Oddly enough, a can exploded in my little fridge just after I sat down to type this. I had run out of the drink yesterday, and nothing was cold, so I put two cans in the freezer. I set my watch to beep me after 90 minutes. When it alerted me, I reached in and took one can out. One can, not two. Oh dear!

Hence the explosion this morning (yesterday morning as you read this). I can tell you Sue is not best pleased with me, for she is the one who knows best how to clean up the mess and how to do it right while I sit here and hang my head in shame and just keep on typing my blog.

That is some sort, but not a good sort, of unfortunate synchronism — to have that explosion at the very time that I am sitting down to write this. No deity could have timed it better

29 comments:

  1. When you started this conversation about sodas yesterday, I remembered my first experience drinking a soft drink...not sure which one. There was the awful experience of the carbonation going up into my nose from my mouth. Yew! But did that keep me from finishing the drink? Or continuing the love of it? Not quite as addicted as you...but I also love one a day. (Which reminds me, original Coke a Cola did have coke in it - which most everyone already knows.)

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    1. One a day is the way to go. When I was trying to lose weight, I managed to do that.

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  2. You bring up a good point which I hadn't thought about. My grandparents and parents both drank pop but for their generations, it was more of a treat due to the expense of it. My generation really was the first generation where drinking pop was more of a habit than a treat. Also like you mentioned, my kids didn't pick up that habit and for that I'm glad. They never drink pop though I wouldn't have prevented it had they wanted too.

    At your age, I think things like this are just fine. You've beaten the odds so you might as well enjoy it with the years you have left. I think I'm still a bit too young to say or think that for now, so I cut my diet pop habit by switching to a healthier vice, carbonated flavored water. It doesn't have the calories, sugar or really anything other than carbonation which seems to scratch the itch that pop itches. Maybe in another decade or two, I'll pick up the pop habit again to enjoy for my remaining years... assuming it is still available for purchase.

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  3. I never encountered soda growing up aside from the very occasional Dandelion and Burdock, so the habit never took. So it's never in my house. I had a young house guest a while back, who didn't drink coffee nor tea, and I asked her what she'd like me to get in for her breakfast drink -- Coke! I was amazed but she was most appreciative.

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    1. I could once enjoy coke for breakfast. Actually, I imagine that I still could and would.

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  4. You're not alone, though I've tried to wean myself from the stuff in recent years. I used to be a Tab addict. Loved it. When they dropped it, I bought up every bit I could (along with Tab memorabilia, like a clock, t-shirt and drinking glass). Now I allow myself one with caff in the morning and one without caff later in the day and going the water route. I know it's better and LOTS less expensive but I don't like it nearly so much!

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    1. I drink coloured water. Really, I add drops.

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  5. We had an explosion here yesterday as well. I meant to toss an empty hairspray can in the trash. Instead I tossed it in the burnable bin. Tim took advantage of a break in the rain to burn trash. Sounded like a gun shot in the side yard.

    When Tim and I met nearly 30 years ago. He never drank soda. I was a Pepsi addict. Somewhere along the line, I lost my taste for carbonated beverages. Somewhere along the line, Tim became the Pepsi fiend.

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  6. Bam! I've had soda explode in the freezer, I've had hubby try to open a 6 pack of plastic bottles with a razor knife and had 3 bottles explode. He was trying to be helpful. I said
    not a word as I cleaned the walls, ceiling, appliances, and flood.
    Stuff happens.
    I stopped drinking soda in 2020 and I don't recall why. I was a Diet Coke fan.

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  7. I don't like carbonated drinks, apart from tonic with an occasional gin. I drink water with lime juice, warming when it's hot water, and quenching when the water's gone cold.

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  8. I never got the pop habit although I can remember my Mum drinking a lot of Coke when I was a kid.

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  9. Your story about the cream soda made me smile. I do remember having my first cream soda, I was blown away! And root beer at the drive-in A&W, it was unbelievably good. I used to do diet coke, but have weaned myself. Do you drink a caffeinated one at night before bed, maybe I read that wrong.

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    1. What I call Caff for short is actually decaf, so no caffeine at night.

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  10. Soda seems to play into your fond memories. I used to drink a lot of it and now just a little. It's mainly because carbonation isn't my friend anymore. (without going into details) Diet coke is the drink I prefer and for whatever reason when I was nauseated in my second pregnancy, coke was the only thing that would settle my stomach.

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  11. As a family of 6 kids in the early 1950's we had bottles of coke in our home all the time. My grandpa owned a dance hall with gambling and women. The bar had coke and my grandpa always kept our fridge full. Then my youngest brother was diagnosed with diabetes. He was 4 year old. The drink went from coke to No-Cal and Fresca. I like that effervescence at the back of my throat too. I have changed to sparkling water for that cold effervescence. It is so good. Sorry about the explosion.

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  12. I have been pre-diabetic for years and I stopped drinking soft drinks about 4 years ago and haven't regretted it.
    Thank you so much for sharing.

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    1. I just drink diet, except for ginger ale, which is not very often.

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  13. If that isn't a clear message to wean yourself off that diabolical drink, what is! -Kate

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  14. Now the music for 'It's the reee al thing" is running in my head. Grump. We had Coke, specifically, in the house for JG and the girls; I drink coffee, thanks. In their adult years the ED and spouse have turned to things like Dr Pepper and the YD only drinks fizzy water and coffee. Lots of coffee. Do you think it is genetic?

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    1. Don't think so. I am the only one that I know of amongst both my ancestors and decendants.

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  15. I never much liked Coke. Growing up, I was a big fan of ginger ale. I almost never drink pop (I call it soft drinks) now, but I do love the hit of carbonation. We get LaCroix Pamplemosse for a treat--no calories, no caffeine.

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  16. For me, I too enjoy colas…. but I significantly prefer the taste of Pepsi to Coke. I do not actually like either real sugar varieties….. and like Pepsi Zero Sugar to Diet Pepsi.

    But, for the last few years, what is REALLY my preference is Diet Dr. Pepper (made by Pepsi) I also very much like Diet Mr. Pibb (the Coke brand)…. although for some reason it is not very common here….. I have mainly seen “Pibb” in southern states.

    PipeTobacco

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  17. Haha…. and we have a grocery store here called “Kroger”…. and I regularly buy their “generic” version they call “Dr. K Zero Sugar”.

    PipeTobacco

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  18. Well you better quit drinking any kind of pop. The stuff's dangerous!

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  19. Funny how a lifetime of small memories can fizz up from a single can of Coke and then quite literally explode all over the freezer at the perfect comic moment.

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  20. I’m a fan of Coke Zero. Not good for me, I know, but like you, I like it. My husband doesn’t like it, my daughter drinks one a day. I drink more, sadly.

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