What flavor is 50 50 soda?

The A.J. Canfield Company was a Chicago-based independent producer of carbonated beverages founded in 1924. The company was known during its later years for marketing unusual flavors, including Canfield's Diet Chocolate Fudge; it was sold by the Canfield family in 1995 to Select Beverages.[1]

History[edit]

The company was started in 1924,[2] at 67th Street and South Chicago Avenue in Chicago, Illinois, by Arthur J. Canfield, a former railroad worker.[3]

Canfield's was unique during much of its early history in the marketing approach of using quart glass bottles of a unique design that could only be returned to the Canfield's bottling plant, whereas almost all regional bottlers at the time used generic quart glass bottles with removable paper labels that could be returned to any bottling plant. The company then promoted its beverages and bottles to be of higher quality than other Chicago area soft drink makers. This plan produced mixed results, as some retailers declined to carry Canfield's products to avoid the extra work required to return the bottles. Canfield's also used unique reinforced wooden cases for delivery and return of their quart bottles to help prevent breakage.

Canfield's was a marketer of this unique bottle until the mid 1970s. Around 1976, Canfield's switched to a plastic quart bottle with a unique shape resembling a vintage glass "milk bottle with cream top". This change coincided with Canfield's "Come Taste The Rainbow - Canfield's Rainbow Of Flavor And Fun" advertising campaign. A wide variety of fruit flavored sodas were added to the product line at this time.

Canfield's was a large scale advertiser on Channel 9 in Chicago until 1995, when the company was sold to Select Beverages.[4] Its largest plant, on the south side of Chicago at East 89th Place, was closed in December 1995.[5]

In 1998, Select Beverages was acquired by the American Bottling Company, a joint venture company owned by Cadbury Schweppes and the Carlyle Group.[6] Ownership would eventually be taken over by Keurig Dr Pepper.

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Ingredients
Carbonated water, high fructose corn syrup, grapefruit juice from concentrate, citric acid, gum acacia, lime juice from concentrate, sodium benzoate (preservative), natural flavor, glyceryl abietate, ascorbic acid (preservative)

Allergen Info
Contains Corn and Its Derivatives.

Disclaimer
Actual product packaging and materials may contain additional and/or different ingredient, nutritional, or proper usage information than the information displayed on our website. You are responsible ... Read More

It’s New Year’s Eve! While this December 31 is—or at least should be—different than any New Year’s Eve that preceded it, we hope you and others in your household are able to pull some familiar sources of joy and comfort from the waning hours of this nightmarish year. As terrible as things have been (and will continue to be for months to come), hopefully you can still find reasons to pop a little champagne, crack some beers, eat some tasty treats, and tip a few cocktails or sugary soft drinks.

If you’re celebrating in Milwaukee or parts of northern Wisconsin, hopefully your last old fashioned of 2020 is stiff, satisfying, and elevated with the tart and tongue-tingling accent of a little-known Midwestern delight. What is this magical elixir we’re referencing? Of course we’re talking about none other than 50/50.



Recently, at the tail end of the same year in which we discovered Supreme Pizza Burgers and Gardetto’s Snack Mix both have metro Milwaukee ties, we learned via a post on the Old Milwaukee Facebook group that a soft drink we—like many others who grew up in Wisconsin—enjoyed during our childhood has a strong and direct connection to the city. Apparently 50/50, a soda with a Texas address on its labels that is currently owned an distributed by Dr. Pepper, was invented right here in Milwaukee.

Courtesy West Milwaukee Historical Society.

The tale of this obscure pop starts way back in the 1870s, when John Graf first made soda on 22nd Street and Greenfield Ave. His flagship root beer, Grandpa Graf’s, gained popularity in the region and his arsenal of carbonated drinks grew in kind. Following his death in 1930, John’s daughter Sylvia Graf took over as President of the burgeoning beverage business and operations were moved to 41st and Greenfield in nearby West Milwaukee. Upon Sylvia’s death in the early ’60s, Lawrie O. Graf took over the family business and used his Marquette University engineering background to bring the local libations like Grandpa Graf’s and other Graf’s beverages (including 50/50) to national consciousness.

In 1968, Lawrie sold the company to P & V Atlas in 1968. From there, Graf’s soft drinks were sold to Canada Dry, who later turned around and sold the line to the Chicago-based A.J. Canfield Company. Each step of the way, 50/50 and its distinct blend of “naturally flavored natural flavors” went along for the ride.

But there’s more! Canfield and all its beverages—50/50 among them—was then gobbled up by Select Beverages. Select Beverages and all its affiliated products were subsequently bought by Dr. Pepper Snapple Group, who currently owns the 50/50 brand.

Even though its parent corporation changed with alarming regularity, the soda variety that was invented by a small company that humbly started on Milwaukee’s south side hasn’t changed much. Its label is endearingly outdated and unchanged since we first enjoyed it in the 1990s. Its green bottle is tinged an unnatural hue by the white, sugary soda within. Though its ingredients have surely been modified significantly since the Graf’s days (just as all soda ingredients and sweeteners have been), the refreshing blend of grapefruit and lime is still outstanding.

Along the way, a Diet 50/50 option was added. Those lucky enough to track down 50/50 around Milwaukee (we got a bottle earlier this week at the Piggly Wiggly on Oklahoma Ave., and we’ve heard Sendik’s stocks it as well) or elsewhere in Wisconsin will find that is still hits the spot in a big way.

And if you’re looking to add a uniquely Milwaukee layer to your Wisconsin old fashioned during tonight’s New Year’s Eve festivities and/or with your Friday fish fry tomorrow, we strongly suggest bringing 50/50 into the rotation. Though it says Plano, Texas on the label and it’s, admittedly, somewhat hard to come across in its native city, 50/50 is still around, is still awesome, and still deserves to be a point of pride for Milwaukee.

Is 50 50 soda still being made?

Though it says Plano, Texas on the label and it's, admittedly, somewhat hard to come across in its native city, 50/50 is still around, is still awesome, and still deserves to be a point of pride for Milwaukee.

What drink is similar to Fresca?

There are two categories of sodas you could use to substitute for Fresca, sweet grapefruit, lemon, or lime sodas. And sodas made without any artificial flavors or sweeteners. The sweet sodas you can get are Fanta, Sunkist, and Lift. The natural sodas you can get are La Croix, Bubly, and Schweppes.

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