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Keith put the Fanta brand at the disposal of the Dutch Coca-Cola plant, of which he had been appointed the official caretaker. Dutch Fanta had a different recipe from German Fanta, using elderberries as a main ingredients. [5] Fanta production was discontinued in 1949. In 1955, in Naples, Italy, production of a new formulation with oranges ...
Ceylon Cold Stores was established in 1866 as the Colombo Ice Company, which in 1863 imported the country's first ice-making machine. With an initial capital of £1,600, two steam engines of 8 and 9 horsepower, and a total of 22 employees, the company started producing ice on a commercial scale. [ 3 ]
In July 2020, My Cola Beverages signed up a sponsorship agreement with Sri Lanka Cricket for a period of three years as the official Carbonated Beverage Partner of Sri Lanka Cricket. [4] In 2023, My Cola Beverages also teamed up with Mercantile Services Basketball Association for the 31st edition of the Mercantile Services Basketball ...
Joya – brand of fruit sodas available in eight flavours from the Coca-Cola Company; Lulu – carbonated soft drinks, available in various flavors; Manzana Lift – line of apple-flavoured sodas available in five varieties from Coca-Cola; Manzanita Deliciosa – flavoured apple soda, from Toluca México traditional with Mexican food, since 56 ...
Fanta Portello (Sri Lanka only) Fanta Shokata; Far Coast – coffee and tea brand in Canada; Fernandes – several tropical fruit-flavored soft drinks only available in Suriname, the Netherlands, and the Caribbean Netherlands; Finley [14] [30] Fioravanti – fruit-flavored soft drink available in Ecuador (1878) [10] and Spain (2006)
Fanta Kola Inglesa is a Peruvian soft drink. It is red in color and cherry - strawberry flavor. Introduced in 1912, Kola Inglesa currently comes in several sizes including a 3-liter bottle and a 500ml bottle.
On May 13, 1997, it was announced that Panamerican Beverages Inc., Coca-Cola's Latin-American distributor, had fully purchased the Emboutelladoras Coca-Cola y Hit de Venezuela joint-venture outright for $1.01 billion. [4] Coca-Cola later discontinued Fanta in the country and rebranded Hit into the Venezuelan counterpart to Fanta.
Citra was a grapefruit-flavored soft drink released into the U.S. market in 1996 by The Coca-Cola Company around the same time as Surge, another citrus-flavored soft drink marketed by Coca-Cola (although Surge contained caffeine while Citra was caffeine-free).