More than you ever wanted to know about the Codd, Ramune, Banta, Goli or Marble Soda Bottles
Vložit
- čas přidán 20. 03. 2023
- ! ! ! DISCOUNTS ! ! !
Gas prices are high and I've been using the app Upside to save. You get cashback when refueling at selected gas stations and even some restaurants. Use promo code X9C5H to get an extra 15¢/gal bonus the first time you buy gas and use the app. upside.app.link/X9C5H - Auta a dopravní prostředky
FYI, not only the men aka guys ask questions but the gals aka women ask questions too dear
Keep in mind, "Guys" when addressing a large crowd is generally considered gender neutral and should not be offensive. Being a person who has never considered gender a limitation, I simply don't think about my wording sometimes. In the future, I will try to be more empathetic towards easily offended people. Thanks for the comment.
I understand why people don’t like the use of “guys” as gender neutral & I’m trying hard to be sensitive to those feelings, but this one has been a real struggle for me. In many regions of the US, “guys” is just an indication of a plural group. Growing up in NJ, my Girl Scout troop leader or my dance teacher might say, “Alright, guys! Quiet down,” and it would feel completely normal. In other regions, you might use “y’all” - that’s how it’s been traditionally used here.
In conclusion, I’m trying, but is old people struggle sometimes. Just know that it’s not always malicious, sometimes, people just make mistakes.
How does it feel to be so unfathomably pathetic that you pick this hill to die on?
Fun facts about the japanese version: it was brought over with Admiral Perry's black ships, and given to Japanese as a gift, containing carbonated lemonade. The Japanese asked what it was, the Americans said "lemonade" which the Japanese misheard and transliterated as "Ramune". They then tried to make their own, using the same style bottles that the first ones were brought over with.(You can also buy Ramune in conventional plastic bottles, but the novelty style seems to be more popular overall.)
In Dagashi Kashi they explain this, i recommend you to watch it
@@daudlozano9176 Ah, it's been a whole since I watched Dagashikashi! iirc the name is a pun because "dagashi" and "kashi" both mean "snack/junk food" but "daga" and "shikashi" both mean "however/also". Of course, I might just be an idiot.
I also remember having the headcanon that the reason everyone's irises were so small was that they were hopped up on sugar, except coffee girl who is obviously hopped up on caffeine... I really need to watch that show again, I don't even remember if I finished it.
@@davids-ip2lr what's it about? Doesn't sound like isekai.
@@Subreon it's a slice of life about a boy who runs a traditional candy/snack/junkfood shop in rural Japan. Apparently it's famous nationwide, and a girl shows up trying to buy the shop out for some huge megacorporation, and a couple times an episode she goes into rants about the history behind some popular candy or snack. It's meant to be both entertaining and informative.
@@davids-ip2lr eventually the boi tells the gurl to kick rocks and eat the rich right?
I find it so delightful that you spent the effort researching and making a video about how the bottle works and why it was invented, despite not knowing about it when you posted the short. It's so annoying whenever people post a question in a Short and never give the answer. Great video!
My pet peeve is when they say 'follow for part 2'
When they know damn well they have 'part' 2 already available and could've put the whole thing in there. Wasting my time isn't going to make me want to subscribe.
This on the other hand..
@@SpaghettioH “Follow for a part 2”
Trash creator: Either doesn’t upload a part 2 or hides it within 20,000 other shorts…
Me: *Don’t recommend this channel*
I thought the same ! 💕 🥹
@@SpaghettioHAGREED 👍
@@sj-redabsolutely
Something that my friend and I used to do with these was chuck them into the freezer for a bit. Now, there is a risk in this as freezing carbonated drinks in glass might make them explode, like beer can. However, when we would throw them into the freezer, they didn't seem to freeze until we took them out and popped the ball seal. They would then rapidly freeze before our eyes. fun to watch.
You call that nucleation… and he trisk of it exploding in the freezer is the reason why is doesnt freeze including some additives.. it freezes when the temprature/pressure ratio. is equal or lower to freeze point
Ramune labels specifically say DO NOT PLACE IN FREEZER 😂
@@cowsagainstcapitalism347 think we have a daredevil out here. What if the marble inside those flasks become canonballs, that would make a cool toy out of them xD
It's the flash freeze effect, there have been a lot of videos covering the topic, and it's always been an interesting phenomenon I've always wanted to play with, but my freezer isn't quite cold enough to get consistent results. But it's cool you and your friend discovered it with no prior knowledge.
@@ngoway9808 no its not the same way it does it different from there one you're mentioning and in one of the top comments you can read it yourself it's different
These were used in my country when my parents were children (1950s-60s). It is nearly impossible to find an intact one. Little boys regularly broke them on purpose, so they could get at the ball inside, to use it as a marble. 😏
what country are you from? these are at any supermarket in the US?
@@evanwright8762 No they are not. These types of bottled soda are not carried at any major retailers in America. Even regular bottled soda is a rarity, most places only stock canned soda. You have to go to specialty retailers or small mom and pop stores/restaurants that import them.
@@digiquo8143 we do have these locally at my Safeway, but not in the soda section but the Japanese section
My mother had a few. They turn up here and there. The better examples have a rubber washer still in place to form the seal against the marble.
@@digiquo8143 Every supermarket in my town (Seattle) has these in stock right now.
Of course American supermarkets carry them. Stop making things up.
I can tell you one reason why this type of bottle is not more popular in the US.
It's because of Americans, and how our minds work.
Specifically, the warning on the bottle: "Do not attempt to remove marble, injury may occur."
Most Americans: "Challenge accepted."
My daughter loves these drinks. I have about half a dozen marbles now. MY MARBLES!
As an American who's drank this a few times and always wondered 'could I get the marble out??' can confirm.
How do you get it out
@@AgentOffice I am not sure I should be encouraging this, because I actually did injure myself doing it, but you can take a serrated knife and cut through the plastic at the top until you hit glass ( you’ll hear it), then extend the cut down the side of the cap, you can loosen the cap’s hold on the rim enough to pry the cap off with a screwdriver (aka: the American multi-tool).
@@AgentOffice I also have a ton of those marbles in a baggy somewhere. I just put them on a trash bag to catch all the glass and shoot them. Of course there is a bit of a mess when cleaning up but it is good fun.
Sounds like a warning label for people who don't want free marbels. Nothing a hammer and a towel can't fix
Interesting. Goli Soda is popular in India esp Tamil Nadu. You pronounce Goli Soda as " Goal-e- Soda"
The bottled “Goli Soda” is very very popular… you should try that too
does that mean Bullet?(similar to hindi Goli)
@@stegotyranno4206 It means marble. Which is what the word bullet was derived from aswell I think.
@Arvind Venkatesan oh yeah both come from a word for round or sphere
Ok..🫠
This glass ball also comes in handy when drinking in car, bus, subway or whatever vehicle is about to accelerate right at the moment you want to take a sip. In this case it prevents you from spilling the beverage all over your face by auto-sealing due to the acceleration towards the opening of the bottle.
Have you tested this?
My friend bought me a bottle of ramune soda the other day. I've never tried it and was always intrigued by it. Anyway, I was super excited when she handed a bottle of the soda to me. I found it very novel to open. Love the little glass marble that drops down and I did really like the flavour which reminded me a lot of cream soda but much more watered down. I really liked it! Plus I liked the whole experience of opening it. Much more entertaining than twisting a cap off. Great fun
I love these bottles! They're such a fun novelty. My only gripe is how much plastic packaging there is, what with the wrapping and the plunger. Bonus that Ramune tastes good 😄
I agree, but I have an additional gripe: how to get the marble out without breaking the bottle.😅
If it's environmental concerns, then the glass is probably much worse. If it's health concerns then a normal glass bottle with metal cap is likely better. Although there is an argument to be made because the marble likely means less plastic in the seal.
@@ano_nym Glass can be recycled much easier than plastic.
Mate, it's mostly a glass bottle, compare it to basically ALL of America's soft drink bottles - you can't really complain or be righteous about plastic waste...
@@Blorper Just because it's not comparable to the waste of an entire country it doesn't mean I can't complain about it a little.
I live in Canada, and I found a similar product in the grocery store a couple weeks ago. It's called Marble Pop . The shape of the bottle caught my attention. I didn't know about the pouring technique. Cool video !!!
That is even more cool now that you explained the details! Awesome!
Subscribed! I really enjoy your straight and to the point format.
Very interesting, thanks for sharing this amazing little bottle 🍾 with your viewers
I found out about this in 2009 at a sushi restaurant that had floating sushi and some of the boats had a prize indicated on the bottom. And my prize was a bottle of ramune. I was so delighted at this unique bottle. Thank you for this video, it was nice to learn how widespread this bottle is in different parts of the world.
I used to live in Japan and would see kids competing with one another on who could finish a bottle of Ramune (the soda packaged in this bottle) the fastest. You couldn't chug it straight away, because the marble to seal the top. It was a true game of skill. Lots of nostalgia watching your video!
Use your tongue to keep the marble from sealing it.
@@angryburnttoast just dont tilt it back all the way... just as you can pour a drink faster by letting the air easily pass through without bubbles slowing down the exchange; so can you keep the marble from closing the top by simply keeping the bottle at 90 degrees instead of 180.
when you tell a kid to "chug a soda" in a race... most dont think about physics and just tilt it 180*
Thanks, this video is exactly as much as I ever wanted to know about the Codd, Ramune, Banta, Goli or Marble Soda Bottles.
Thanks for the info! I personally love this drink a lot, so I’m glad to know more about it.
You are the most well spoken person I've ever heard
Thank you for the upload! I have never seen these in my life and it doesnt surprise me since the country enforced bottle pawn to be reused and reselled a long time ago
Super interesting, thanks for sharing !
First had one at Disney Epcot in 2010. Took a bit to figure out how to open but got it. Saved bottle for a souvenir.
I’ve been a big fan of these drinks since high school and I’ve never questioned why this bottled was made this way I just thought it was a fun way to open a bottle lol thank you greatly for informing me of a drink I already have in my fridge🤙🏼
Thanks for researching this so we didn't have to. A video where I learnt something. Good presentation as well.
I definitely learned something new today. Thank you ❤😊
i rarely find interesting videos nowadays with the abundance of shorts but when i do i always subscribe and comment to show support man thank you for the video
My family loves these. We knew everything but sealing back up. So thank you
Im familiar with these bottles from a variety of asian-imported food marts but getting some insight into their history and some tidbits on how you can use them; the resealing specifically, was super cool
Ramune sounds like Lamune in Japanese. It was "lime" written in Japanese letters. If you hit the bottle opening really hard with the palm of your hand, you can pop the marble without using that plastic thing. That's the way it was opened 100 years ago.
I think it's actually a shortening of "lemonade" and they just dropped the "do" after a while
The reason why the Japanese named it Ramune is because it was originally a British lemonade soda...As with all English to Japanese translations something got lost , it's said that they choose the word because they either thought that's what lemonade meant or that it was just an easy way to describe the soda to the Japanese people without butchering the name.
The Japanese then just wrote down the foreign words as they heard using the closest Japanese sounds and letters. It happened/happens so often. "Keki (with a long EH sound)" for "cake" is an example.
Some bottles, I can make the bottom blow off if I hit the top with my palm.
The ra family uses a sound not in English, something like a hybrid between R, L and D.
"Lime" would be spelled ra i mu in my opinion, not ra mu ne. (I prefer putting spaces between what the characters would be, for clarity on singular transcribed words.) I don't know where the actual name of the soda comes from, just enjoy the soda ever since we got them when I lived in Japan for a year as a child.
Your my hero! I didn't even know I needed to know this!
Funny I grabbed one of these at a ramen restaurant without knowing what I grabbed. And went through the same experience as those kids you were talking about. It is definitely a novelty, and it's fun to see a video on it a few months later
Thank you for this full of information educational video
Thanks for this follow up! We just had to know!!😁👍
Right On!!! You can find those sodas in Fresno, Ca. At the Winco
Subbed: JUST because of the channel name! Good video, too! Thanks for posting!
I don’t usually sub to random channels I see shorts of but this was genuinely fascinating and I love the curiousity on display here ❤
It's pretty cool of you to do this follow up video ❤
This answered all my questions! Cool!!
Love the channel name. Never saw the short but this was a fun little video. The algorithm seems to like it too. Maybe consider doing more content like this in the future.
Okay, I never knew about the sealing the bottle by shaking it upside down. That's cool!
You made me want one! They’re hard to find, but worth grabbing when you see them, they’re so fun!
I actually see them at walmart sometimes, in the asian section
One of the most satisfying sounds...
Omg i drink these sometimes and hate to carry it around open.. never thought you can seal them again. I love it
the name "ramune", is supposed to sound like lemonade.
ita a old style carbonated lemonade. the bottle is called Codd-neck bottle invented in UK.
the bottle were used everywhere around the world until bottle cap was invented.
everyone stop manufacturing the bottle becauce bottle cap was superior in every aspect.
but for some reason people in japan kept it as it is.
I'm pretty sure the only Japanese brand that uses this type of bottle is Ramune; all other sodas there use standard bottles.
@@Geotpf Ramune is this type of drink and not a brand, and there can be multiple different ramune products. Convenience stores generally have ramune in regular plastic bottle, which sounds inauthentic and frankly don't seem much different from Sprite or 7up.
Soo.. Rahmoonay?
If you knew this already why didn't you say it in the first video. Repeating what the video already said was pointless 😂
I think that this ラムネ is still popular because it has a special nostalgia for summer fun to the Japanese -- a refreshment under the hot sun, a drink at the night festival... (and, of course, the fun about opening the bottle.)
Simple, informative, direct, friendly! Awesome energy and approach, bit of an outlier to find your channel through but it's a lovely find nonetheless. 😁
The reseal is amazing. I never knew that
I remember getting Ramune for the first time in college. We'd try all different ways to keep the ball and souvenir. Smashing the bottle was a little hazardous so I basically whittled the hole big enough for it to come out lol
Yes!! I'm reading a great book called How To Be A Victorian, and they mention these bottles in the section about play! The children would collect the marbles to play the game of marbles!
These have been around for ages, and I guess it was a way to make the whole bottle from glass sort of easily, avoiding the need for a capping machine.
A John Seymour book featured such a bottle with a pointed bottom, a purely mobile device it seems.
*The most wholesome quality content*
I want a longer video on this. It’s like the first 4 min was so good I want three more lol
for a novelty, ramune is my favorite soda. The melon flavor tastes delicious and even if you cant get one with these special bottles i recommend trying ramune out
yeah I love the flavor. a lot of people say the classic tastes like Sprite, but it's unique in a way I can't place.
Now the question is how the process of the bottle is made and the bottling process for Ramune!
“I got excited, cause it was a bottle I never seen before.”
Instant sub.
i think i remember seeing these when i was a kid in an Australian store once and then never again. i guess found some of the last few before they fell out of use
My granddad told me about bottles like that when I was a kid, he and his mates would smash them to get the marbles out, if he'd get caught smashing them he'd catch a beating because most of the time the bottles wern't his, the shops would send the bottles back, and there was a deposit on them so people would get pissed off because you were basiclly tossing thier money against a rock.
that ball seal was called "pirolito" in Portugal in min childhood, only heard of it - I never saw one myself.
I had my first ramune cola today and it was exciting to open the bottle 😅
My daughter shops at the Asian food & grocery store and buys something similar to that. She loves those drinks.
its almost certainly the same, ラムネ is what it will say in Japanese, as thats how you write ramune
Similair… well probably not
I didn't know it was uncommon to see these. I saw them all around LA, growing up. I think you also found them in Mexico. I know my pops knew about him and he's from the 60s.
"You should totes drink this, it's amazeballs."
-Commodore Matthew C. Perry introducing lemonade to Japan
They way it can be resealed is pretty awesome
quite fascinating thx!
I’ve never seen one of those. I’ll have to go see if I can find one at Asian market now. Cheers POP!
Thank you CZcams recommendations God's for suggesting this video in my fed.
Pretty interesting video.
But now I'm curious how do they get the glass ball inside the bottle and seal it after filling it with soda.
Sooo these could be cool with one of those home soda fountains... resealable bottle...
Nice thanks
Cool;
Goli soda pronounced as "goalee" soda still in use near my place in India. All goli soda drinks are less carbonated. And many are home made too in shops.
Yep, & In Maharashtra it's called Goti soda. pronounced as "Goatee". I absolutely love it. 😋
I literally just noticed these for the first time ever today and bought one, I haven't even opened it yet. Good thing I found this video first
Plus the kids can take out the Marble for certain toys.
They used to have to break it but the newer plastic design now allows them to take it out safely .
Hu! Traipsed in here for the soda bottle answer. Here to stay for repairs n'stuff in the future. Fixing stuff is important ie dinner!
You can also open it with one hand and without a hard surface, by putting your palm over the plastic opener, and closing your fingers over the contours to use as a grip.
I like this stuff. It's like a light sweet tart.
I do really like the soda that's generally sold in the Ramune bottles here in the UK. Much less sickly sweet than most sodas, and a mellower Flavour
If there's alcohol in that bottle, trust I'll figure out how to open and drink appropriately..
However, since it seems like it's just regular drink instead lol I'm thankful you've showed me 😆 🤣
Fascinating
That's so cool! X0D
I also thought the glass marble would work as a widget too, to keep the drink even fizzier while drinking? X03
Ok I didn't know you could seal it again, that's pretty cool.
💙 My Love and I enjoy these soda bottles as well as ginger beer 💙
Thank you CZcams for this recommendation
And of course you for making the video :)
Great video!
Hell yeah, thanks!
I always wondered why Ramune came in that weird bottle. Now I know. Thanks.
Cool. Thank you for following up.
When I worked at Walmart I put these on the shelf.
Lovely video!
As a kid I remember being able to unscrew the top clockwise to get the marble out
I've always had this since I was a kid. My grandma would always buy these for me and I loved them. I would always tried to get the marble out.
I loved buying these in Yokohama. Unlike the ones I've found in the States, over there the caps screwed off so you could keep the marbles
It'd be interesting to do that with properly branded marbles, the Pepsi swirly colours as an example, as an obvious collectible. That could be an interesting marketing strategy for a western fizzy drink brand.
My nephew loves these things. I saw it and thought it was neat. That was months ago and now I'm seeing a video on how they were made and when and why lmao
Never knew you could reseal it. Cool
Yeah, but it can leak. You have to listen for air escaping
A good introduction to your channel
My grandkids love them because they can just slap the top plunger and have that ball pop, just something different.
Cool thanks man. Hope this video does solid like the other did.
The title is such clickbait lmfao… In fact, I learned EVERYTHING I wanted to about these bottles from you haha. Great video!
3:20
my mind has been blown!
Thanks!
Really cool!
This was the standard soda bottle in Italy in the 1940's; I saw some (empty) at flea markets when I was a kid and my grandmother had to explain them to me. I had no idea they were still around.
My favorite anime too!
Good catch m8, thanks