Vita Cola

Vita Cola is a cola beverage produced in Germany. Vita Cola's flavor is described as cola-like with a strong note of lemon and fruit flavoring. It is also noticeably less sweet than Afri-Cola, Coca-Cola or Pepsi, and has a slightly thicker consistency due to its use of citrus and other aromatic oils in the formula. Vitasoy (an unrelated company) also produces a cola beverage branded as Vita Cola.

Vita-Cola
ManufacturerThüringer Waldquell
FlavourCola
Related productsCoca-Cola
WebsiteOfficial site of Vita Cola (German)

History and Popularity

Vita Cola started out in the German Democratic Republic. Introduced in 1957, it was advertised as Brauselimonade mit Frucht- und Kräutergeschmack (carbonated soft drink with fruit and herb flavoring), using a formula that is still kept secret (similar to Coca-Cola's "Merchandise 7X" formula). At its peak, Vita Cola was bottled in over 200 factories.

After the fall of the Berlin Wall and Iron Curtain in 1989, Vita Cola's business quickly collapsed as Western cola brands took its place. However, with the advent of Ostalgie (nostalgia among East Germans for the "old days"), many former GDR products were brought back, Vita Cola being one of the most popular.

The company Thüringer Waldquell from Schmalkalden, Thuringia, secured the rights to the name and formula and began producing Vita Cola in 1994. For some time, Vita Cola sponsored FC Hansa Rostock, a soccer club from Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. Vita Cola has since then surpassed Pepsi Cola and is still regaining market share in the former East Germany.[1]

In Thuringia, Vita Cola had the biggest market share of colas in 2009, even above Coca-Cola.[2] That means that Thuringia is one of the few regions in the world where a regional cola brand is the market leader.[3] Vita Cola

A 2019 news item stated that the product sold a record 89 million liters in 2018 "making it Germany’s most popular domestic cola".[4]

Today there is only one other former East German cola brand in production: Club Cola.[5]

Ingredients

Natural mineral water, Sugar, Carbonic acid, Acidulants (E270, citric acid, phosphate), Dye E150 d, Natural aroma, Vitamin C, Caffeine.

gollark: Because it's part of *our framework*, it's totally different, we can use any terminology we like!
gollark: But it's not that. It's *special*!
gollark: How descriptive.
gollark: Is it some bizarre library-specific thing?
gollark: I wouldn't really like writing Haskell without the ability to make my code even more cryptic via stuff like `<*>`.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.