[HPFGU-OTChatter] Re: Pepsi vs. Coke, Deposits

yael-pou yael_pou at hotmail.com
Fri Apr 13 09:24:12 UTC 2001


Ebony,

I read your mail, and realised that my jaw was dropping an extra centimetre with every line of text. We were brought up under such different circumstances, and yet, we're so alike.

For one - I, too, pour myself a tall glass of coke every time I'm at my parent house (although I never drink it <VBEG>). The reasons are quite similar. Only difference - my father's still alive, which means I don't go there that often <G>.

Well, those were two similarities, actually. 

The third is the bottles. Here, there's a 30 cents deposit for glass bottles, so we definitely keep them. Problem is, I constantly forget to take them to the store, so we've got about 70 bottles waiting. To connect this to Carole's thread - we keep them in the patio :).


BTW - As a child, I thought that the ultimate syrupy soft drink was Rum. I mean, otherwise, why would ship-wreck survivors in all the books be so happy to find a barrel full of it? :)


Thanks, Yael

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Ebony AKA AngieJ 


  Truthfully, I thought everybody drank Pepsi until college.

  I remember being a kid and everybody making fun of the 
  disgusting "new Coke".  In the 1980s in Detroit, Coke was considered 
  too syrupy, too sweet, and too uncool for consumption by normal 
  people.  I mean, *Michael Jackson* drank Pepsi.  Enough said.

  My dad drank a bottle of Pepsi with dinner every day until he died.  
  I am not making this up.  The few times my mother forgot to buy some 
  and the house didn't have a drop of Pepsi, he would grab his keys and 
  leave without another word... he'd return after a while with a case 
  of Pepsi.

  My parents' Pepsi jones ran so deep that for most of my childhood, my 
  sisters and I were not allowed to drink that ambrosia.  The rule 
  was "Kool-aid for kids and Pepsi for adults."  So I make it a point 
  to pour myself a tall glass of Pepsi whenever I'm over my mother's 
  house... I'm working through childhood issues of deprivation, I guess.

  When Pepsi (and everyone else) stopped making glass bottles, my 
  father saved the last one in the case and placed it in the china 
  cabinet as a shrine to his favorite drink.  It's still there.

  And then I lived in North Florida for four years and some change... 
  and found out that nobody in the South drinks Pepsi.

  It's all Coke... and RC... and Chek... and all sorts of other weird 
  drinks.  In order to get a taste of Pepsi, you had to go to KFC or 
  Taco Bell... and it *still* didn't taste the same.

  Pepsi preference aside, the best array of soft drinks is Faygo.  
  Another Midwestern thing, I'm sure... perhaps Michigan only.  Faygo 
  comes in about as many flavors as Baskin-Robbins ice cream does, and 
  costs anywhere from fifty-nine to ninety-nine cents a bottle plus 
  deposit.  Good stuff!  My favorite flavors are Rock and Rye (cream 
  soda), Twist (lemon-lime), and Redpop (strawberry).

  Speaking of deposits, that's another thing that's weird here.  We're 
  the only state with a 10-cent deposit on almost EVERY soft drink 
  container.  (There's another handful of states with a 5-cent deposit 
  law).  This means you have to pay for the pop, then add 10 cents to 
  EACH bottle or can you purchase.  So if you buy a six-pack of Faygo, 
  you're paying the price plus 60 cents.  This means we don't throw 
  cans away... we rinse them carefully, we place them in special bins  
  in our houses (or stack them on the side of the sink) and then drive 
  them faithfully back to the store.  Homeless people and desperate 
  college students at Michigan collect empty pop cans for a little 
  spare change as well.  ;-)

  When I lived in Florida, my housemates saw me saving cans 
  frantically, and thought I was a nutcase until I explained.  Then 
  they had to tell me "it's okay, Ebony... you can throw it away... 
  it's okay."

  --Ebony (who really ought to take the 70-odd pop cans and bottles she 
  has stashed between her trunk and the coat closet back to the store 
  one day... that's a good seven dollars right there, and I could treat 
  myself to a matinee.  ;-))

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