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  2. Clicquot Club Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clicquot_Club_Company

    These two were the key ingredients to his ginger ale making the company standout in this field. A bottle of Clicquot Club Ginger Ale, the soft drink for which the company was best known. Even though word of his soda spread over southeastern New England in the next few years, the cost of such fine ingredients eventually forced Henry Millis to ...

  3. Vernors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vernors

    Vernors is a sweet "golden" ginger ale that derives its color, like other commercial, industrially produced ginger ales, from caramel, and has a robust, vanilla-heavy flavor. [19] The Vernors style was common before Prohibition , during which "dry" pale, less sweet ginger ale (typified by Canada Dry Ginger Ale) became popular as a drink mixer .

  4. Ginger ale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ginger_ale

    Ginger beer originated in England in the 1800s while ginger ale was founded in Ireland approximately 50 years later before it was modernized in 1907 by John McLaughlin. [14] Original ginger beer contains 11% alcohol, but modern ginger beer contains less than 0.5% alcohol while modern ginger ale has absolutely no alcohol content. [ 15 ]

  5. James Vernor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Vernor

    However, in a 1936 interview, son James Vernor Jr. suggested that his father did not develop the Vernors Ginger Ale formula until after the war, a fact confirmed both by former company president James Vernor Davis in a 1962 interview and the 1911 trademark application on "Vernor's" as a name for ginger ale and extract. According to it Vernors ...

  6. Red Rock (drink) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Rock_(drink)

    The Red Rock Company was founded in 1885 by Lee Hagan and G. T. Dodd of Atlanta, Georgia. Dodd initially introduced ginger ale as the company's first product, which became popular in the Southern U.S. By 1938, Red Rock was an early leader in the distribution of carbonated beverages, distributing 12-ounce bottles by way of a distribution network ...

  7. Double Cola Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_Cola_Company

    The Double-Cola product was developed in 1933 and soon became the company's flagship product. The product was named Double-Cola because its 12-ounce (350 ml) bottles were twice the size of other soda bottles being sold at the time. [3] It was soon followed by flavored Double-Orange, Double-Lemon, and Double-Grape and "Double-Dry" ginger ale. [1]

  8. 7 Up - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/7_Up

    A spice-flavored beverage, similar to Vernor's Ginger Ale. Though 7 Up's marketing slogan at that time was "Never Had It, Never Will" (referring to caffeine), 7 Up Gold included caffeine as an ingredient. It was introduced by 7 Up in the hopes of capturing 1% of the cola market, which at the time was $26.6 billion. However, it only captured 0.1 ...

  9. Stewart's Fountain Classics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stewart's_Fountain_Classics

    Stewart's are nostalgic "old fashioned" fountain sodas, having originated at the Stewart's Restaurants, a chain of root beer stands started in 1924 by Frank Stewart in Mansfield, Ohio. In 1990, the bottling rights to Stewart's were acquired by the Cable Car Beverage Corporation. Cream Soda and Ginger Beer flavors were introduced in 1992. Other ...