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Around Passover every year (this year it's April 22 through April 30), Coca-Cola releases a special bottle so soda lovers who keep kosher can celebrate with their favorite drink.
There's a reason why those yellow cap Coke bottles appear only once a year: It signifies that the drink is kosher for Passover. The post If You See a Yellow Cap on Coca-Cola, This Is What It Means ...
During Passover each year, Coke sells a limited number of sodas that are made without corn syrup.
The company quickly reintroduced the original beverage, rebranded as "Coca-Cola Classic", while continuing to market the new version as simply "Coke". [25] The new version remained on the market, in North America only, for 17 years—the last 10 as "Coke II"—until it was quietly discontinued in 2002. [25]
Coca-Cola (), or Coke, is a cola soft drink manufactured by the Coca-Cola Company.In 2013, Coke products were sold in over 200 countries and territories worldwide, with consumers drinking more than 1.8 billion company beverage servings each day. [1]
A similar version of Coca-Cola is bottled in Israel during the Jewish holiday of Pesach (Passover in English). The corn syrup in the standard recipe is replaced by cane sugar in compliance with Jewish dietary law, which states that no grains or grain products may be consumed during the holiday. It is packaged differently than standard Coke; a ...
As the Jewish Festival of Lights, or Hanukkah, is fast approaching (December 25, 2024 to January 2, 2025), we’re looking forward to playing dreidel (and winning gelt!), lighting the menorah with ...
Coca-Cola markets sugar-sweetened versions of their soda in the United States during the Jewish holiday of Passover under the name Kosher Coca-Cola, and sugar-sweetened Mexican Coke is also sold via import year-round. Regional Coca-Cola bottlers in Cleveland, Ohio and Allentown, Pennsylvania started using sugar as a sweetener in 2007.