Top Pop Cola reminds me of an incredibly beautiful woman I've long admired from afar, yet only got around to seducing last night. The delayed gratification heightened my interest in the consumation of my desire, but the act itself turned out be a disappointment.
As loyal readers will know, I first spotted Top Pop empty on a sidewalk a few months ago. I cased the local shops but didn't turn up a bottle and had to decide that the litterbug had ported it in from some far off locale. Fortunately I was proven wrong when I saw some in a deli about four blocks from my initial encounter. A whole range of generic flavors was lined up for the eager customer, so generic I can't remember what was actually there.
Fearing my wife's rage, I only picked up the cola. I'm sure that those same bottles will be lingering on the shelves when I return in a year or two.
First off, the cost to flavor ratio is tops. I believe the bottle was sixty five cents, and it contains twenty four "fl" ounces of drink. That's pretty good, considering it tastes like medium class generic bar cola. It ain't bad at all, certainly not as awful as what I'd braced myself for.
Which brings me to an aside: The sodas I've been drinking for the past several months are all pretty not-awful. I mean, I haven't had a Skeleteens level of awful since the Skeleteens drinks, and I haven't had "sweet corn drink" awful since I woke up while sleep-eating out of the cat litter box. Damn you Ambien! The danger and excitement is sorely lacking from my reviewing, it's now sort of like hanging dry wall as I work through my umpteenth orange drink which is only differentiated from all the rest because it was mixed up in Oregon.
Bah.
Drinking Top Pop is like drinking dry wall, review-wise.
Anyways, it's a better tasting cola drink. Not as thick as Coke or Pepsi, none of the chemical nasty found in those drinks. No after taste, no slime on the teeth. It's still made with corn syrup, but I couldn't tell. It's main impression is that it's a diet soda that wasn't made with diet sweetener, as silly as that sounds.
In fact, that's what it is. It has all the qualities of Diet Coke but it's not aspartame sweetened or whatever that crap is.
Reviewing this soda makes me feel like Clement Greenberg.
As a failing artist, I appreciate the label in particular. It's a combination of Jackson Pollock with a Roy Lichtenstein drawing of a paint brush stroke worked through in a 60s slasher film color palette. The yellow band across the top reads "20% MORE THAN 20 OZ." then there's a circle with a U in it. What the hell does that mean? I know the "circle K" for kosher, maybe circe U means it was packed by an undine. Or it's safe for consumption with brains for the undead. Or the liquid is less than twelve percent umber hulk.
Anyways, there you go. Not great, not bad, just middling blah. But a good blah for the price.
Hey Tim, another great review. The circle-U means it's kosher. It's the trademark of one of the Rabbi groups that inspects food for kosherness.
ReplyDeleteThe "U" in a circle stands for PARVE, or Glatt Kosher, the ultimate in clean.
ReplyDeleteI should add, it means that no NON-Kosher food solids, nor Non Kosher liquids have gone thru any machinery used to process the container, cap or eatable liquid.
ReplyDeleteBTW, I just fell into this site. My 2 favortes (because I like a challenger in finding them, 'cause I am sadistic, are RC Cola (Royal Crown AND Boylan Bottling Company's Pure Cane Cola (also their Root Beer.) They are in N.J. as am I......
I grew up with RC Cola as the discount cola product, it was a half cut above the super discount store brands but way the hell below Coke and Pepsi. And I don't know if I've ever found a Boylan's I like.
ReplyDeleteI love their COLA and the Root Beer. Never tied any of the others, not keen on grape or orange soda....
ReplyDeleteAhhh I remembering buying this from Roses ...
ReplyDeleteI am having a glass of Top Pop cola right now, it's excellent for the price.
ReplyDelete