There is a bit of fitness and health trend that has led to
less people drinking soda and more people avoiding artificial sweeteners. Which
isn’t great for the soda industry. In response, a lot of soda companies are
making some pretty weird flavors. Pepsi has come out with Mango, Berry, and
Lime. I get lime. Restaurants often had a lime or lemon to your drink, so it is
often associated with cola. Mango and berry…seem pretty weird. I have now tried
both Mango and Berry. Berry is okay, it isn’t that different from cherry. It
tastes kind of like you are drinking Pepsi and eating gummy worms at the same
time. Mango was not bad, really. Or good. I have had the Pepsi Mango (591mL)
bottle for over a week. I’m starting to get concerned it will go bad before I
finish it. It is just too very strong, very sweet flavors competing. It
definitely tastes like mango, with kind of a chemically cola aftertaste and a
weird fizziness. It was weird.
Coca Cola also game out with new flavors. Including six
different flavors of Diet Coke, each seeming weirder than the last. The newest
are strawberry guava and blueberry acai. I haven’t tried either, and have not
been eager to try either, despite liking strawberry. The other flavors are
ginger lime, twisted mango, zesty blood orange, and feisty cherry. Orange and
lime aren’t too weird. They tie into the citrus flavor that is not uncommonly
associated with cola. The mango isn’t as sweet as the Pepsi Mango. Feisty
cherry is like a cinnamon cherry flavor. It is weird. It’s like a slightly
spicy version of diet cherry coke. There
was also raspberry Coca Cola. Which is a really similar flavor profile to Pepsi
Berry. There is also a lime Coca Cola and they brought back a vanilla Coca
Cola.
Overall, I don’t think I actually really like any of them. I
like Feisty Cherry probably the most of all of the ones that I have tried. But
maybe I would actually like the Diet Coke Strawberry Guava, Diet Coke Blueberry
Acai, or Pepsi Lime. I don’t know.
Overall, the new flavors seem weird more than anything else.
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