Monday, 18 May 2009

SodaStream Offers Home Carbonation Systems

It was in 1903 that the first SodaStream carbonation maker was invented.

When different concentrated syrups became available in the 1970s and 1980s, drink machines were made that could add concentrates to create carbonated drinks in popular flavors. After a merger with Soda-Club the company was relaunched as a way to make healthy drinks for kids.

SodaStream's drink maker is a small device that forces carbon dioxide into water, making it have a taste like soda pop. The system includes: a machine; a canister of carbon dioxide; and reusable beverage bottles suitable for pressurizing. The bottle, when filled with water, is screwed on to the machine, and with a push of the button ejects compressed CO2 from a canister into the bottle, making sparkling water (also called seltzer). There are more than a few flavors which can be used to create regular soft drinks by adding a tiny amount to the carbonated bottle of water. When the canister is out of CO2, you return it to the market and purchase a carbon dioxide (CO2) refill.

With so many categories of concentrate, different and unique flavors of soft drinks can be made. In the era when the systems were most popular, many well-known brands were available for SodaStream in the concentrates – such as Fanta, and Sunkist.

MilkStream, is a variation of the SodaStream, and was designed for making milkshakes. Ice cream, milk and Crusha syrup can be combined in a glass, and utilizing an extended wand into the glass, a frothy, delicious milkshake is made.

The first machines made were rather large, and were sold to the upper classes of London, even to the royal household. There were more than a few flavors with odd names, including the famous sarsaparilla introduced in the 1920s. In 1955 the first home carbonation machine was produced.

SodaStream's super popularity in the UK during the 1970s and 1980s has helped fuel its current association with nostalgia for that era. The advertising jingle in 1970s was, "Get busy with the fizzy"; the slogan was so popular that it was added to the company logo. In 1996 it was retired after 17 years of use.

Commercially successful, there was a perception by some that the soft drinks made by these machines were a less satisfying imitation of their commercial counterparts. One of the noted differences was that, besides slightly different flavors of the produced drink, the bubbles made by SodaStream machines are larger and shorter-lived. Today this has changed, partly because of Aromhuset flavors for carbonated water, and Sodastream now is the leader in sparkling water.

Today, SodaStream is part of Soda-Club; there are numerous websites where products can be purchased and supplies ordered, and reordered, when needed.

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