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W.W. Clements, former CEO and president of the Dr Pepper/7-Up Company, described the taste of Dr Pepper as one-of-a-kind, saying, "I've always maintained you cannot tell anyone what Dr Pepper tastes like because it's so different. It's not an apple, it's not an orange, it's not a strawberry, it's not a root beer, it's not even a cola. It's a ...
However, it only captured 0.1% of the market because people were confused by 7 Up marketing a dark-colored soft drink with caffeine, and the drink was discontinued the following year. The 7 Up Gold recipe was actually an unused Dr Pepper invention. [27] Diet 7 Up Gold 1988
Dr Pepper & Cream Soda, on the other hand, is a different story. The volume of the vanilla is cranked up to 100, and our office compared the flavor of this soda to a cream soda Dum Dum.
Dr Pepper fans have a new flavor to try: Blackberry! ... Fans of Dr Pepper don't just like it, they love it. ... you'll be able to sip the one-of-a-kind sweetness in 12-pack cans and 20-ounce ...
Move over mulled apple cider and hot chocolate—there’s a new (well, old) cozy beverage making a comeback. Enter: hot Dr Pepper, the fizzy winter warmer that had its heyday in the 1960s and is ...
After Dr Pepper and 7 Up merged in 1986, distribution of IBC spread across the United States. Dr Pepper/Seven Up was acquired by Cadbury Schweppes in 1995. In July 2016, IBC reformulated its beverages, using cane sugar in place of high-fructose corn syrup. The bottles are now distributed in four-bottle packs (instead of the original six), and ...
The classic Dr Pepper proudly boasts a proprietary blend of 23 flavors, which give the drink its signature taste, including notes of cinnamon, vanilla, ginger, nutmeg, oranges, and allspice ...
By 1998 Dr Pepper/Seven Up, a subsidiary of Cadbury Schweppes, was hindered by its bottling and distribution systems; owning no private bottling plants, it was dependent on independent bottlers or those controlled by Coca-Cola or Pepsi to bottle its beverages, and those two giant competitors also had better distribution systems and more influence with retail and fast-food chains.