Kristin Holt's Blog, page 13
August 5, 2017
Victorian Dr. Pepper (1885)
Dr Pepper was born in 1885--FIRST of national soda flavors--a result of Victorian ingenuity and creativity, in Waco, Texas. Vintage newspaper ads show the soda fountain beverage's claim to natural, healthful medicinal value--while strictly claiming an absence of all harmful substances. I discovered interesting details I'd never heard before... Perhaps you will, too!
August 1, 2017
Book Review: Starred Ratings of THREE different Old West Tales and Legends (Audiobooks)
This summer, I've listened to the Audible (audio) editions of three Old West nonfiction recounts of tales and legends in America's history. My starred ratings illustrate how much I found them worthwhile, enjoyable, and informative. Love history? These three are worth checking out.
July 29, 2017
Victorian Cheesecake?
Today, July 30th, is National Cheesecake Day. Yummy!
Did cheesecake exist in Victorian times? Earlier? When was it invented? The timeline of this rich dessert might surprise you! Come see vintage recipes from Victorian-era American newspapers and cookbooks, variations on the theme of cheesecake, and learn how "new" ingredients (such as Philadelphia Cream Cheese) came about... A calorie-free way to celebrate National Cheesecake Day!
July 26, 2017
The Victorian Root Beer War
Hires Root Beer, from its debut in the 1880s, was sold as a refreshing beverage (with no medicinal expectations). The name, chosen by Charles H. Hires, to appeal to tough coal miners, who'd never find "root tea" attractive, ended up causing Hires Co. a bit of trouble with Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU). Who knew that "beer" in a name, and the common knowledge that root beer extract was percolated with alcohol (though the finished drink had no more than a whole loaf of homemade bread), to cause banning of the beverage?
July 18, 2017
Book Review: ROMANCING THE BEAT: Story Structure for Romance Novels by Gwen Hayes
I found a book for writers, instructing how to plot a romance so all the essential elements are present, and the book was SO valuable, helped so much, I can't keep this excellent find to myself. Come see my 5-star review for Gwen Hayes's Romancing the Beat: Story Structure for Romance Novels.
July 14, 2017
New at the Soda Fountain: Pepsi-Cola!
Pepsi-Cola was born in North Carolina from a soda fountain beverage first known as "Brad's Drink". Caleb Davis Bradham ran a drugstore and served cola-based beverages to his customers. His own creation, ("Brad's Drink" which became) Pepsi-Cola, arrived at the turn of the century. Pepsi-Cola few with the new (20th) century, with changing logos, bottle shapes, and the nickel-a-glass price. One big difference from Victorian Coca-Cola? Twice the size of that glass, for the same price.
New at the Soda Fountain: Pepsi-cola!
Pepsi-Cola was born in North Carolina from a soda fountain beverage first known as "Brad's Drink". Caleb Davis Bradham ran a drugstore and served cola-based beverages to his customers. His own creation, ("Brad's Drink" which became) Pepsi-Cola, arrived at the turn of the century. Pepsi-Cola few with the new (20th) century, with changing logos, bottle shapes, and the nickel-a-glass price. One big difference from Victorian Coca-Cola? Twice the size of that glass, for the same price.
July 10, 2017
Cocaine in Victorian Coca-Cola: Going… Going… Gone?
We know original Coca-Cola (debuted 1886) did have cocaine in it--and not "a trivial amount". The product began as a replacement for coca wine (just what it sounds like), when temperance laws outlaws alcohol, and Pemberton needed a replacement vector for his coca leaves. Looking back at vintage sources, it's easy to see when cocaine was removed from Coca-Cola, and how the owners ensured their not-yet-trademarked product remained protected. Numerous credible scientists analyzed the syrup (from various retail locations), swearing to Coca-Cola's freedom from cocaine, but the attacks didn't stop overnight. Decades later, Coca-Cola maintained its status as a substance-free "refreshing drink", a 180° switch from its Patent Medicine beginning.
July 7, 2017
Victorian Coca-Cola Gains Popularity…and Critics (Cocaine In My Soda Water?)
"[Coca-Cola] has gained an enviable reputation, and has taken position at the very front of the leading and popular soda fountain beverages," said The Atlanta Constitution of Atlanta, Georgia, on June 21, 1891. People loved the beverage (and its medicinal value), and many wrote testimonials in its favor. So why the complaints? A vintage article titled It Looks Like a Dangerous Drink, originally published in The Abbeville Press And Banner of Abbeville, South Carolina, on July 1, 1891 brings up concerns and presents arguments on both sides, urging consumers to draw their own conclusions. Had YOU been a consumer in 1891, what would you have thought?
July 4, 2017
New Coca-Cola: Branded, Bottled, Corked, and only 5¢!
In the 1890s, Coca-Cola bottled their carbonated beverage, first in cork-sealed bottles. Metal caps came along relatively quickly. The company went through many different glass bottles until settling on their branded shape that is still in use today. Coca-Cola's logos changed very little through the years, and the Victorian-era Spencerian script is still Coke's highly recognizable choice today. Each glass (or bottle), about 6 oz. each, sold for just 5¢. Initially promoted as a health-promoting, illness-defeating tonic (patent medicine), the beverage was soon advertised as a refreshing beverage...and with good reason.
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