Does it taste the same as sugar? I’ve found that diet Coke doesn’t taste the same to me as regular Coke, and I would prefer non-sweet tea to sweet but weird-tasting tea. Then again, I like unsweetened tea and coffee. To someone who found them really unpalatable, artificial sweeteners would definitely be worth it.
Diet Coke has a long history of not tasting the same as regular Coke. They even made an ad campaign about it (YouTube) in the late ’80s. Only Coke Zero is supposed to taste the same.
No, Diet Coke doesn’t taste the same as regular coke; but why would you want it to? As best I can tell, a preference for the flavor of sugared Coke over unsugared Coke is simply a learned preference like preferring Catsup over Brown Sauce or vice versa. I switched to Diet Coke many years ago, and these days regular Coke tastes wrong and not as refreshingly delicious to me. Stick with it for a while, and you not only get used to it. You come to prefer it.
In less sweet drinks like coffee, I’m not sure I could tell the difference between sugar and other sweeteners. FWIW, I do find that aspartame (Equal) works better in coffee than sucralose (Splenda).
Fair enough—I don’t like the syrupyness of regular coke, but I drink diet, although it certainly doesn’t taste like real sugar. Although I’d ask if you’ve used other artificial sweeteners than Splenda, because most taste terrible, but it’s an entirely different chemical preparation—sucralose which comes from actual sugar, not dextrose or aspartame which come from tar.
I’ve always found the “tastes like sugar because it’s made from sugar” slogan awfully disingenuous. I mean, yes, it does taste like sugar, and it is made with sugar, but it’s a chlorinated sugar compound. The fact that it’s safe and tastes like sugar rather than say, rat poison, was hardly a foregone conclusion, and was only discovered in the first place due to a lab mistake that could easily have featured in an obituary. On the other hand, there’s no reason a compound made using tar needs to taste bad. In terms of elements, there’s nothing in tar that isn’t in sugar (at least in significant quantities, provided the tar is clean.)
Does it taste the same as sugar? I’ve found that diet Coke doesn’t taste the same to me as regular Coke, and I would prefer non-sweet tea to sweet but weird-tasting tea. Then again, I like unsweetened tea and coffee. To someone who found them really unpalatable, artificial sweeteners would definitely be worth it.
Diet Coke has a long history of not tasting the same as regular Coke. They even made an ad campaign about it (YouTube) in the late ’80s. Only Coke Zero is supposed to taste the same.
And fails, unfortunately.
No, Diet Coke doesn’t taste the same as regular coke; but why would you want it to? As best I can tell, a preference for the flavor of sugared Coke over unsugared Coke is simply a learned preference like preferring Catsup over Brown Sauce or vice versa. I switched to Diet Coke many years ago, and these days regular Coke tastes wrong and not as refreshingly delicious to me. Stick with it for a while, and you not only get used to it. You come to prefer it.
In less sweet drinks like coffee, I’m not sure I could tell the difference between sugar and other sweeteners. FWIW, I do find that aspartame (Equal) works better in coffee than sucralose (Splenda).
Fair enough—I don’t like the syrupyness of regular coke, but I drink diet, although it certainly doesn’t taste like real sugar. Although I’d ask if you’ve used other artificial sweeteners than Splenda, because most taste terrible, but it’s an entirely different chemical preparation—sucralose which comes from actual sugar, not dextrose or aspartame which come from tar.
I’ve always found the “tastes like sugar because it’s made from sugar” slogan awfully disingenuous. I mean, yes, it does taste like sugar, and it is made with sugar, but it’s a chlorinated sugar compound. The fact that it’s safe and tastes like sugar rather than say, rat poison, was hardly a foregone conclusion, and was only discovered in the first place due to a lab mistake that could easily have featured in an obituary. On the other hand, there’s no reason a compound made using tar needs to taste bad. In terms of elements, there’s nothing in tar that isn’t in sugar (at least in significant quantities, provided the tar is clean.)
Also, dextrose is a naturally occurring sugar.