Most of the U.S. uses aluminum exclusively. The best tasting cola, however comes from the old reuseable glass bottles. Nothing can come close in taste to that.
You’ve never lived until you’ve drunk from a half-coconut shell. It has a small effect on taste, and is a little clumsy to handle, but it’s still a nice drink container. And yes, I do run around the house banging that and it’s other half together making horsey noises.
Yes, but my local 7-11 stopped selling Coke in coconut shells in ought six.
You see back then Coke was called McWilly’s and you had to put the shells under your hats. A “round-head” we called it. Anyway, one time I had my round-head and some new peg-board shoes, which were the fashion at the time…
I’ve never noticed a taste difference between the types of metal cans used, but I definitely have noticed the difference between sugar- and corn syrup-based formulas. If we’re talking just Coke, here, the Coke that comes in steel cans is much more likely to be sugar-based. Anything coming out of the U.S. will be corn-syrup based, and in an aluminum can. I wonder if that’s what’s going on here.
no, but i do know what you mean about corn syrup tasting different - i hate it! we dont get it in UK, but when i was in USA last year i couldnt get a decent Coke anywhere cos it was all corn syrup stuff. i feel sorry for you Yanks if you have to drink that pish every day.
the Coke in UK is made in UK, it doesnt come from america. and we dont use corn syrup at all (thank f*ck)