logo
How Coca-Cola's Secret Formula Has Changed Over Time

How Coca-Cola's Secret Formula Has Changed Over Time

Gulf Insider2 days ago
Coca-Cola debuted in 1886 as a pharmacy fountain drink. Its original syrup drew on coca leaves and kola nuts for stimulation and flavor. Over time, the recipe changed alongside regulations, technology, and tastes.
In the following chart, Visual Capitalist's Bruno Venditti pairs a quick dataset with context on how ingredients and nutrition have evolved.
Early formulas included coca leaf extract, and small amounts of cocaine remained until the early 1900s.
By 1903, the drug was removed amid changing laws and public health concerns. Coca-leaf flavoring persisted in 'decocainized' form, prepared under license in the U.S. by a facility now operated by Stepan Company. These shifts preserved the brand's flavor profile while complying with evolving regulation.
In the U.S., Coca-Cola transitioned from cane sugar to high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS) during the 1980s, with reporting in 1984 noting the move across major soda brands.
Cost and supply dynamics favored corn syrup at the time. Not every market followed: in the U.K., for instance, Coca-Cola Original lists 'sugar' rather than HFCS. This split explains why 'Mexican Coke' tastes different to some consumers.
'I have been speaking to Coca-Cola about using real cane sugar in Coke in the United States, and they have agreed to do so… It's just better!'
– Donald Trump
U.S. Coke has six standard ingredients: carbonated water, HFCS, caramel color, phosphoric acid, natural flavors, and caffeine. A 20 fl oz (591 mL) bottle has ~240 calories, ~65 g added sugar, and ~75 mg sodium, though labels can vary. Because the 1886 recipe is proprietary and not publicly released, a direct comparison isn't possible.
Following Trump's push, Coca-Cola has announced it will launch a new product sweetened with U.S.-produced cane sugar next fall.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Here's Where ChatGPT Is Currently Banned
Here's Where ChatGPT Is Currently Banned

Gulf Insider

time8 hours ago

  • Gulf Insider

Here's Where ChatGPT Is Currently Banned

Governments around the world are taking different stances on artificial intelligence tools like ChatGPT. While some embrace the technology, others have restricted or outright banned access due to political, cultural, or security concerns. In 2025, ChatGPT remains unavailable in 20 countries. In this visualization, Visual Capitalist's Marcus Lu highlights where ChatGPT is banned, as well as places where OpenAI does not offer service. The data for this visualization comes from a list compiled by Cybernews, which we referenced with an official OpenAI list of supported countries. Many of the bans are found in countries with strict internet control, such as China, North Korea, and Iran. These governments limit access to foreign digital platforms, often citing information control and political stability as reasons. In China, for example, users have access to several LLMs that were developed by domestic companies, including Alibaba's Qwen, DeepSeek, Baichuan, and Tencent-backed Hunyuan. Meanwhile, in conflict zones like Syria, Afghanistan, and Yemen, bans are linked to both security concerns and limited infrastructure. Not all countries on the list have active bans. In places like Hong Kong and Belarus, the service is unavailable because OpenAI does not support accounts there. These exclusions are often due to business, regulatory, or legal complexities rather than explicit censorship.

Visualizing The World's AI Compute Hubs
Visualizing The World's AI Compute Hubs

Gulf Insider

timea day ago

  • Gulf Insider

Visualizing The World's AI Compute Hubs

Today, global AI computing resources are clearly concentrated in the U.S. and China. Together, the two countries host 50 of the world's 132 AI accelerator-enabled cloud regions. Given rising demand for AI systems, several countries are ramping up investment in local AI infrastructure, much of this in partnership with Nvidia. This graphic, via Visual Capitalist's Dorothy Neufeld, shows AI computing hubs by country, based on data from the University of Oxford. Below, we show the number of AI accelerator-enabled cloud regions by country: Today, the U.S. and China are the only countries globally with AI accelerators—specialized chips like Nvidia GPUs—from domestic suppliers. In fact, over 95% of the world's AI accelerators are powered by U.S. chipmakers. As a result 'compute sovereignty' is highly uneven globally, with the vast majority of nations having no AI infrastructure at all. More recently, the European Commission slotted $23 billion for creating five AI gigafactories. Meanwhile, the UAE is investing $1.4 trillion in AI infrastructure to drive economic transformation. Overall, Nvidia says that 20 countries so far are expressing interest in AI sovereignty initiatives, including France, Germany, and Indonesia.

How Coca-Cola's Secret Formula Has Changed Over Time
How Coca-Cola's Secret Formula Has Changed Over Time

Gulf Insider

time2 days ago

  • Gulf Insider

How Coca-Cola's Secret Formula Has Changed Over Time

Coca-Cola debuted in 1886 as a pharmacy fountain drink. Its original syrup drew on coca leaves and kola nuts for stimulation and flavor. Over time, the recipe changed alongside regulations, technology, and tastes. In the following chart, Visual Capitalist's Bruno Venditti pairs a quick dataset with context on how ingredients and nutrition have evolved. Early formulas included coca leaf extract, and small amounts of cocaine remained until the early 1900s. By 1903, the drug was removed amid changing laws and public health concerns. Coca-leaf flavoring persisted in 'decocainized' form, prepared under license in the U.S. by a facility now operated by Stepan Company. These shifts preserved the brand's flavor profile while complying with evolving regulation. In the U.S., Coca-Cola transitioned from cane sugar to high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS) during the 1980s, with reporting in 1984 noting the move across major soda brands. Cost and supply dynamics favored corn syrup at the time. Not every market followed: in the U.K., for instance, Coca-Cola Original lists 'sugar' rather than HFCS. This split explains why 'Mexican Coke' tastes different to some consumers. 'I have been speaking to Coca-Cola about using real cane sugar in Coke in the United States, and they have agreed to do so… It's just better!' – Donald Trump U.S. Coke has six standard ingredients: carbonated water, HFCS, caramel color, phosphoric acid, natural flavors, and caffeine. A 20 fl oz (591 mL) bottle has ~240 calories, ~65 g added sugar, and ~75 mg sodium, though labels can vary. Because the 1886 recipe is proprietary and not publicly released, a direct comparison isn't possible. Following Trump's push, Coca-Cola has announced it will launch a new product sweetened with U.S.-produced cane sugar next fall.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store