Vernors
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Vernors | |
|---|---|
| Type | Ginger ale |
| Manufacturer | Dr Pepper Snapple Group |
| Country of origin | United States |
| Introduced | 1866 |
| Variants | Boston cooler |
Vernors ginger ale shares the title of America's oldest soft drink with Hires Root Beer. It was invented in 1866 by James Vernor, a Detroit pharmacist.
Contents |
[edit] History
In 1862, James Vernor was called off to the American Civil War. According to legend, he left a mixture of ginger, vanilla and spices sitting in an oak cask in a pharmacy he had been working in. After returning from battle four years later, he opened the keg and found the drink inside had been changed by the aging process in the wood. It was like nothing else he had ever tasted, and he purportedly declared it "Deliciously different," which remains the drink's motto to this day. Its current slogan is "Barrel Aged, Bold Taste!". The apostrophe in the name "Vernor's" was dropped in the late 1950s.[1]
Vernors is a golden ginger ale with a pungent flavor, more like a ginger beer. This style was common before Prohibition when the less flavorful pale ginger ale became popular as an alcoholic mixer. While Michiganders who grew up with it tend to like it, many other Americans are suspicious of it[citation needed], as it doesn't taste like a "typical" ginger ale.
Vernors has a reputation of being highly carbonated and drinking Vernors from a glass can sometimes make one sneeze or cough from the bubbles it gives off. Some people consume Vernors hot as a remedy for stomachache, with ginger being the active ingredient.
The Vernor family owned the company until 1966 when they sold it to an investment group. The company was next acquired by American Consumer Products and then by United Brands before being purchased by A&W Beverages in 1987. A&W was later purchased by Cadbury Schweppes.
Although both Hires Root Beer and Vernors claim the title of first American soft drink, some argue that while Hires Root Beer was just another root beer, Vernors was not just another ginger ale, due to its unique aging process and unusual sweetener. For many, Vernor's Ginger Ale is, in fact, the first true American-born soft drink.
[edit] Stevia controversy
From 1866 to 1991 Vernors was originally sweetened with stevia. Stevia was replaced with high fructose corn syrup when the FDA banned stevia in 1991.
[edit] Availability
Vernors was not mass distributed nationally until the late 1980s. Previously the drink was primarily distributed only within a few hundred miles of Detroit, with particular popularity in Michigan, Western New York, Ohio, Chicago, and Southern Ontario, but it can now be found throughout the United States. It is also popular in Florida, which has large numbers of retired Metro Detroiters[citation needed], and was even sporadically seen for sale there in the early 1960s — again, due to the presence of northerners migrating to the state after the Second World War.
[edit] Detroit menu items that include Vernors
A Boston cooler is an ice cream soda drink made from Vernors and vanilla ice cream, named not after Boston, Massachusetts, where Vernors is practically unknown, but after Detroit's Boston Boulevard, where it was supposedly invented.
For many years the Detroit-based Sanders Confectionery chain offered a special Vernors-flavored ice cream at its retail stores.
[edit] References
- The Vernor's Story : From Gnomes to Now, Lawrence L. Rouch, ISBN 0-472-06697-8
[edit] External links
- Vernors page from Cadbury Schweppes web site
- A Vernors Fansite [2]
- Snack foods and pop, Detroit style
- Vernor's Collectors Club [3]
- A Tasty Part of Flint History--The former Vernor's outlet in Flint, MI, now Halo Burger

