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List of soft drink flavors

A soft drink is a beverage that typically contains carbonated water, one or more flavourings and sweeteners such as sugar, HFCS, fruit juices, and/or sugar substitutes such as sucralose, acesulfame-K, aspartame and cyclamate. Soft drinks may also contain caffeine, colorings, preservatives and other ingredients.

Flavors

  • Almond – common mixed flavor in many drinks, also the primary flavor for brands like Suburban Club sodas such as Almond Smash. Almond-flavored soft drinks are sometimes prepared using orgeat syrup.
  • Ginger ale – carbonated soft drink flavored with ginger in one of two ways. The golden style is closer to the ginger beer original, and is credited to the American doctor Thomas Cantrell. The dry style (also called the pale style) is a paler drink with a much milder ginger-flavor to it, and was created by Canadian John McLaughlin.
  • Ginger beer – produced in two versions: brewed ginger beer (which includes home-brewed) or a carbonated drink flavored primarily with ginger and sweetened with sugar or artificial sweeteners.
  • Grape soda – grape-flavored soft drinks and sodas
  • Grapefruit – brands of grapefruit-flavored soda include Fresca, Ting, Pelmosoda and Squirt, among others.
  • Guarana – carbonated soft drinks with guarana are produced and marketed in Latin American countries.
  • Guava – such as Jarritos brand
  • Hops - used in Hop water.
  • Irn-Bru – citrus-based soft drink popular in Scotland
  • Kvass – a fermented cereal-based low-alcoholic beverage of cloudy appearance and sweet-sour taste.
  • Lavender
  • Lemon – liquid derived from the outer skin of lemons may be used to flavor soft drinks, other beverages and foods. Brands of lemon-flavored soda include R. White's, Coca-Cola with Lemon, Gini and Solo, among others. Lemonade in the United Kingdom and other Commonwealth countries, or in Mexico, may refer to carbonated lemon-flavored soda as well as the non-carbonated version.
  • Lemon-lime – common carbonated soft drink flavor, consisting of lemon and lime flavoring, such as 7 Up, Sprite, Sierra Mist, and Starry. Ramune is a Japanese soft drink, which takes its name from a transliteration of the English word lemonade, which in certain English-speaking countries is used to refer to lemon-lime soft drinks, though the Ramune brand has expanded beyond the lemon-lime flavor.
  • Lemon verbena () – such as Inca Kola
  • Orange soft drink – sometimes referred to as orangeade
  • Papaya – such as the discontinued product by Izze
  • Passionfruit – such as Passiona, sold only in Australia. There was also a brand of Fanta produced in Brazil with the flavor, selected by the customers in a contest.
  • Peach – such as Big Peach or Nehi Peach
  • Pear – such as the previous product by Izze
  • "Pepper" flavor, a proprietary mix of Dr. Pepper, with the original Mr. Pibb positioned as a competitor in this flavor category
  • Raspberry – may be referred to as raspberryade in the United Kingdom. Similar soft drinks are also known as raspberry soda in other parts of the world.
  • Rhubarb — typically house-made, a strawberry-rhubarb variant produced by soda brand Culture Pop.
  • Root beer – originally made using the root of the sassafras plant (or the bark of a sassafras tree) as the primary flavor.
  • Elder or elderberry – used in soft drinks such as socată
  • Salak is usually used in sodas in Thailand, commonly mistaken for Strawberry
  • Sarsaparilla – originally made from the Smilax regelii plant, sodas with this flavor are sometimes made with artificial flavors.
  • Shirley Temple
  • Spruce beer is a beverage flavored with the buds, needles, or essence of spruce trees. In the Canadian provinces of Newfoundland and Quebec, it is known in French as . Spruce beer may refer to either an artificially flavored non-alcoholic carbonated soft drink, or to genuine spruce beer.

Specialty

  • Bludwine/Budwine – brand of cherry-flavored soft drink that was produced in the United States by the Bludwine Company and Bludwine Bottling Company. In 1921, the company changed the name of the soft drink product from Bludwine to Budwine. Production of Budwine stopped in the mid-1990s. As of 2009, the brand was in existence and run by two entrepreneurs in Georgia.
  • Dandelion and burdock – consumed in the British Isles since the Middle Ages. It was originally a type of light mead, but over the years has evolved into the non-alcoholic soft drink commercially available today. Fentimans produces a variety of this drink.
  • Bacon soda – soft drink beverage that has the flavor of bacon. Several U.S. companies produce bacon soda brands, including Jones Soda, Lockhart Smokehouse and Rocket Fizz.
  • Buffalo wing – produced by Rocket Fizz
  • Coffee – produced by Rocket Fizz
  • Espresso – produced by Manhattan Special
  • Julebrus – Norwegian soft drink, usually with a festive label on the bottle. It is brewed by most Norwegian breweries as a Christmas drink for minors, who are not eligible (by law) to enjoy the traditional (English: Christmas ale), but is also very popular among adults as well.
  • Open-source cola – any cola soft drink produced according to an open-sourced recipe
  • Elixir, – produced by Orca Beverage Inc.
  • Ranch dressing – produced by Rocket Fizz
  • Squash – non-alcoholic concentrated syrup mixed with water or carbonated water to create a soft drink

See also

References

External links