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Dr. Brown's varieties include The Original Cream Soda (regular and diet), Black Cherry soda (regular and diet), Ginger Ale, Root Beer (regular and diet), and Cel-Ray (celery-flavored soda). Former flavors include Cola, Orange, Grape, Tune-Up (Lemon) and Club Soda. Dr. Brown's soda is typically sold in 12-ounce cans and two-liter bottles.
It was served in New York delicatessens starting in 1869 and sold as a bottled soda starting in 1886. [3] The Food and Drug Administration objected to its being called a "tonic", and in the 1900s the name was changed to Dr. Brown's Cel-Ray (soda). Cel-Ray was so popular in the 1930s among New York City's Jewish community that it earned the ...
Diet soda. Diet or light beverages (also marketed as sugar-free, zero-calorie, low-calorie, zero-sugar or zero) are generally sugar-free, artificially sweetened beverages with few or no calories. They are marketed for diabetics and other people who want to reduce their sugar and/or caloric intake.
In Japan, "cream soda" (クリームソーダ) is a term used for an ice cream float made with melon-flavored soda (メロンソーダ) topped with a scoop of vanilla ice cream. Japanese style cream soda. In Malaysia, the F&N or Fraser and Neave brand makes a clear ice cream soda that sold in a blue packaging.
50/50; 7 Up; A&W Cream Soda; A&W Root Beer; Barrelhead Root Beer; Big Red (soft drink) Cactus Cooler; Canada Dry; Canfield's Diet Chocolate Fudge; Crush; Dr Pepper
Coca-Cola C2 – discontinued lo-carb and low sugar version. Coca-Cola California Raspberry – Released 2018, a naturally flavored variant of Coca-Cola sweetened with cane sugar. Coca-Cola Citra – a citrus cola, available only in Japan. Coca-Cola Clear – a clear cola, available in Japan.