Chemistry:Pepsi-Cola Made with Real Sugar

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Short description: Soft drink brand
Pepsi-Cola Made with Real Sugar
Pepsi realsugar logo.png
Bottles of Pepsi-Cola Made with Real Sugar.jpg
Bottles of Pepsi-Cola Made with Real Sugar
Product typeCola drink
OwnerPepsiCo
CountryU.S.
Introduced2008; 16 years ago (2008)
Websitepepsi.com/realsugar

Pepsi-Cola Made with Real Sugar, originally called Pepsi Throwback and still branded that way in some markets, is a soft drink sold by PepsiCo. The drink is flavored with cane sugar and beet sugar instead of high-fructose corn syrup, with which soft drink companies replaced sugar in their North American products in the 1980s.[1] In June 2014, the Pepsi Throwback name was replaced by the current name, which continues to be made without high-fructose corn syrup. As of April 2020, it received a new logo.[2][3] The "throwback" name was also used for a variant of PepsiCo's citrus-flavored Mountain Dew. In early 2024, it was announced that Pepsi-Cola Made with Real Sugar would be rebranded as Pepsi-Cola Soda Shop Made with Real Sugar with new packaging to fit in with the company's Soda Shop series of cane sugar sweetened colas.

Development

The cost of sugar in the United States started to rise in the late 1970s and into the 1980s as a result of government-imposed tariffs,[citation needed] prompting soft drink manufacturers to switch to high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS) as a cheaper alternative to sugar.[citation needed] By the mid-1980s, all of the major soft drink brands had switched to HFCS for their North American products,[citation needed] with the original formula of Coca-Cola being one of the last holdouts.[citation needed] In most countries, sugar is still used rather than HFCS.[citation needed]

By the late 2000s, many soft drink fans wanted a return of sugar in the drinks, citing a slightly sweeter taste, controversies over negative health effects of HFCS, increases in the cost of corn syrup due to increased use of the product for ethanol production, as well as the cost of sugar having since dropped at that time. [citation needed]

In early 2009, PepsiCo announced plans to release versions of Pepsi (and Mountain Dew) with pure cane sugar as its main sweetener, and without the citric acid found in regular Pepsi, on a limited basis.[1] The original shipment went on sale in April 2009, and ended in June. Sales were strong for both, prompting PepsiCo to release a second limited edition for December 2009 – February 2010.

A third batch was released on July 31, 2010, again as a five-week limited availability.[4]

On October 12, Consumerist.com reported that Pepsi had decided to continue offering the Throwback line as long as consumers continued to buy it.[5]

A fourth batch appeared in stores in late December 2010, without a limited edition logo on the packaging.[citation needed]

In January 2011, Pepsi Throwback began appearing in 12-packs of 355-ml cans, 591-ml bottles, and 32-pack 355-ml cans across Canada.[citation needed] In March 2011, Pepsi Throwback was discontinued in Canada but returned in October 2012.[1]

On March 11, 2011, PepsiCo announced that both Pepsi Throwback and Mountain Dew Throwback would become permanent additions to the Pepsi and Mountain Dew product lines.[6]

In 2014, Pepsi Throwback was replaced in most regions by "Pepsi-Cola Made with Real Sugar."[2][3] This product has 10 mg less sodium than the previous Pepsi Throwback, and 1 g less sugar per 20 fl oz (591 mL), reducing the labeled calorie count on a bottle of that size from 260 to 250.[7][8]

Pepsi Throwback is still sold seasonally in Canada, with its most recent release being in late March 2023.[citation needed]

In early 2024, Pepsi-Cola Made with Real Sugar was rebranded as Pepsi-Cola Soda Shop Made with Real Sugar.

Packaging

A 12 fl oz (355 mL) can of Pepsi Throwback from 2010. Early cans had a "limited time only" branding.

The first release featured the 1940s Pepsi-Cola script in royal blue on a navy blue background with the word "throwback" written in the modern font. With the second release in December 2009, Pepsi used an exact replica of the 1973–1987 logo.

The change in branding away from the "Throwback" name has led to new packaging. The Pepsi-Cola Made with Real Sugar label is a variant of the Pepsi label that includes the 1940s-era "Pepsi-Cola" script logo accompanied by a banner reading "Made with Real Sugar."

With the rebranding to Pepsi-Cola Soda Shop Made with Real Sugar in early 2024, the font color of the text "Pepsi-Cola", "Soda Shop", and "Made with Real Sugar" was changed to black, in a similar way as the rebranded regular Pepsi logo as of 2023, with both the can design and bottle labels now having a white background with what appears to be a close-up of the red and blue sections of the Pepsi globe at the top and bottom edges.

Nutritional comparison

Nutritional details[9]
Pepsi Pepsi Throwback Pepsi-Cola
Made with Real Sugar
Serving 12 fl oz (355 mL) 12 fl oz (355 mL) 12 fl oz (355 mL)
Calories 150 150 150
Sodium 30 mg 20 mg 30 mg
Potassium 10 mg 0 mg 10 mg
Phosphorus 53 mg 60 mg 60 mg
Total Carb. 41 g 40 g 40 g
Sugars 41 g 40 g 40 g
Caffeine 38 mg 38 mg 38 mg
Ingredients Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Caramel Color, Sugar, Phosphoric Acid, Caffeine, Citric Acid, Natural Flavor Carbonated Water, Sugar, Caramel Color, Phosphoric Acid, Caffeine, Natural Flavor Carbonated Water, Sugar, Caramel Color, Phosphoric Acid, Caffeine, Natural Flavor

Similar competing drinks

Dr Pepper started selling "Heritage Dr Pepper" in response in November 2009. Sugar-sweetened Dr Pepper was available from a single bottling plant in Texas until January 2012 (see Dublin Dr Pepper).

In a rare move of no competition within the Cola Wars, Coca-Cola had no plans, as of early December 2012, to release a sugar-sweetened version of Coca-Cola on a regular basis.[citation needed] Aside from Kosher Coca-Cola, sold only for the Jewish holiday of Passover, and Mexican Coke, sold via import in the United States, the last time Coca-Cola was sold in the United States with sugar rather than high-fructose corn syrup was in 1985, just before the introduction of New Coke. The only exceptions began in 2007, when Coca-Cola bottlers in Cleveland, Ohio and Allentown, Pennsylvania started using sugar as a sweetener year-round for Coca-Cola, making these two markets the only ones in which sugar-sweetened Coca-Cola was sold throughout the year.

In 2011, Dr Pepper Snapple Group announced 7UP Retro, a sugar-sweetened version of 7 Up, that would be available for a limited time. This became a direct competitor to Mountain Dew Throwback, but 7UP Retro stopped production later in the year, while Mountain Dew Throwback continued production. Mexican 7 Up, which is exported to the United States, still has sugar. Dr Pepper Snapple Group also later released a 7UP variant called "Simple 7UP" which contains natural ingredients and a mixture of cane sugar and stevia leaf extract as the sweeteners.

See also

  • Pepsi Raw – another variant with real sugar marketed in the UK during 2008–2010 (and a similar concept variant called Pepsi Natural in the U.S.)
  • Jones Soda – switched to cane sugar in 2007

References

External links