I thought Coke was always Kosher, even with the corn syrup.
Sucrose is basically sugar, derived from cane or beets, or a mixture of both. But SAME ingredients, with different Rabbinical supervision. I'm baffled why Coca-Cola hasn't released a product similar to Pepsi "Throwback".Kosher for Passover coke man!
Bring back glass!Mexican Coke has a small, but devoted slice of the Coke-drinkers market (a majority love Coca-Cola Classic, there are tons of Diet Coke admirers, and then there are the cherry and vanilla lovers). Mexican Coke uses real cane sugar (instead of the Coke in the U.S. which uses high-fructose corn syrup) Out of curiosity I looked at the label for "Kosher" on Passover Coke and saw that the second ingredient is sucrose!
I hoard it throughout the year. Mexican Coke has a small, but devoted slice of the Coke-drinkers market (a majority love Coca-Cola Classic, there are tons of Diet Coke admirers, and then there are the cherry and vanilla lovers). This is filled in part by Coke from Mexico, where cane sugar is cheaper than corn syrup. Well, all Coke products are Kosher, but Kosher for Passover Coke is only available usually the month before Passover because the HFCS is a corn derivative and thus not permissable during Passover.
Mexican Coke has a small, but devoted slice of the Coke-drinkers market (a majority love Coca-Cola Classic, there are tons of Diet Coke admirers, and then there are the cherry and vanilla lovers).
Yes. Coca Cola products in Mexico NOT KOSHER CERTIFIED.
Mexican coke was planning on switching to the crappy sweetener but the Mexican coke market of people weren't having it.
Similarly, in the sugar rulings, the WTO ruled that the Mexican efforts to protect its homegrown sugar industry against the incursions of imported high-fructose corn syrup were trade barriers. You can also read the documentation to learn about Wordfence's blocking tools, or visit wordfence.com to learn more about Wordfence.Wordfence is a security plugin installed on over 3 million WordPress sites. Mexican Coke was first sold at grocers who served Latino clientele, but as its popularity grew among non-Latinos, larger chains like Costco, Sam's club and Kroger began to stock it.
Mexican Coke was first sold at grocers who served Latino clientele, but as its popularity grew among non-Latinos, larger chains like Costco, Sam's club and Kroger began to stock it. Then, once a year, there’s the kosher Coke for Passover. Environmental protesters in Seattle wore the turtle suits to express their opinion that local environmental laws should trump international trade law. There’s no reason it shouldn’t be.
I can find nothing online about this, except for that in the USA, Mexican Coke is sold in glass bottles. You will then receive an email that helps you regain access.Your access to this service has been limited.
Because when you pick it up you throw it back on the shelf because you realize Coke made a superior tasting product.We love to drink it with pizza and burgers.l just have to figure out the customs.I'd be a diabetic in a month.Anything bottled in glass tastes better.The carbonation is fizzier somehow.They sell coke in little glass bottles around my area in Chicago, that stuff doesn't use sugar?
Mexican coke and kosher coke can both be bought year round if you are resourceful, but regular coke is required to use corn syrup because if they used regular sugar in regular coke, it would use up all the sugar supply in america in just a few weeks or so, no joke, and corn syrup is an "american product" blah blah blah (my father works for coke, many more facts where that came from) Of course, being a glass bottle, the Mexican Coke has a cool old school metal bottle cap. So if you love Coke and think it’s perfect, perhaps something else that isn’t quite the same will not be something you like. This, too, is sugar-sweetened. Well sort of.
Mexican coke has what coke used to have years ago, cane sugar. Join the discussion today. Once again, the U.S. went to the WTO, and the organization again ruled in favor of the U.S.“International versus local—this is a huge issue,” says Liepold. The spread of results I got from this initial testing was surprising to say the least, and answered one thing for sure: There is a perceivable difference in the flavor between Mexican and American Coke, despite the best efforts of the Coca-Cola company to convince us otherwise. Sugar is seen as more globally responsible, anti-big business. So much so that when the Mexican bottler of Coca-Cola let it slip that it was considering switching to high-fructose corn syrup to save money, fans of Mexican Coke expressed enough outrage to get the Mexican bottler to stick with cane sugar.
Why ordinary Coke isn’t kosher is … The WTO, which had ruled in favor of the U.S. in the Mexican sugar spat, this time decided against the U.S., which had to drop its requirement.
“They’re anti-brand. Here's another "kosher Coke tidbit:" One of the main ingredients in Coke is corn syrup, which Jews do not eat during Passover. A commenter from the story argues:Most of the “better taste” factor with MexiCoke comes from it being in glass bottles instead of cans or plastic. Another of Mexican Coke’s attractions is aesthetic—the glass bottle in which it comes, known internally at the Coca-Cola Company as the “contour bottle,” says Coke historian Ted Ryan (yes, the company has an official historian).