Hartford Courant

Soda shops hit a fever pitch during pandemic

In the Mountain West, stores a hit with LDS members

- By Victoria Petersen

Samantha Durfey was a high school sophomore in St. George, Utah, when the first Swig soda shop opened there. Today, at 28, Durfey visits the shop at least three times a week. She usually orders a Save Me Jade — Diet Dr Pepper with sugar-free vanilla and coconut flavor syrups — but every now and then she’ll change her order if she wants a break from caffeine.

“They have really good carbonated-water drinks, and because carbonated water itself is disgusting they mix it with fresh fruits and sugar-free syrups and stuff,” she said, “and it makes it taste really yummy.”

Since the first Swig opened in 2010, dozens of soda shop chains and independen­t soda shacks have opened from Idaho to Utah to Arizona, an area of the Mountain West sometimes called the Mormon Corridor. A significan­t portion of the region’s population belongs to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and the church’s prohibitio­n on tea and coffee has spurred a niche beverage market that has intensifie­d in the last decade, hitting a fever pitch during the pandemic.

New soda shops are also increasing­ly opening in other parts of the country, including South Carolina, Florida, Texas and Oklahoma.

“Some people say, ‘Oh, well, it’s just a Utah trend,’ and we kind of proved that wrong when we went to Oklahoma, and proved people like their soda everywhere,” said Nicole Tanner, who founded Swig with her husband, Todd.

“It may sound so weird to some people who have never been, but it’s happiness in a cup. I’ve always known from the start that this is something that can and should go everywhere.”

The idea for Swig came out of Nicole Tanner’s family outings to Sonic, where “they had the good pebble ice, and the good foam cup,” she said.

Several of the major soda shop chains in Utah — Swig, Sodaliciou­s, Fiiz and others — are projecting aggressive growth in

the next few years. Kevin Auernig, an owner of Sodaliciou­s, said the 25-shop company will double its locations in the next three years. Fiiz started franchisin­g five months after opening in 2014 and now has nearly 40 stores in Utah, Texas, Colorado, Idaho and Nevada, “with a bunch more in the hopper,” said the chain’s owner, Jason Anderson. There are 26 Twisted Sugar shops around the country, but by this time next year there could be nearly 100 franchises, said Tonia Jardine, an owner of the chain.

Swig, which employs about 700 people, plans to open 10 to 15 shops a year, and in two or three years, Tanner said she hopes there will be 200 or more shops across the United States.

The soda shop chains pay special attention to the history of Starbucks — which decades ago expanded at a breakneck pace, from fewer than 20

stores in 1987 to more than 100 in 1992. Worldwide, there are more than 30,000 Starbucks stores today. Many soda shop owners believe their industry could be at least that successful.

“There is a great soda-drinking culture in the Mountain West region,” Auernig said, adding, “What Starbucks originally did for coffee was kind of our idea with soda.”

U.S. soda consumptio­n has been steadily declining over the last two decades, but Americans still drink an annual average of 37 gallons of soda per person, according to 2019 data from the Beverage Marketing Corp.

Soda shop offerings vary from store to store, but they always include brand-name soda or energy drink bases with add-ins like flavored syrups, fruit purées and dairy products like creamer and halfand-half. At Fiiz — which opened in 2014 north of

Salt Lake City in Bountiful,

Utah — a menu of nearly 600 drinks, using 67 syrups, gives customers vast drink options.

After Mitt Romney was photograph­ed drinking a Diet Coke while running for president in 2012, the church posted a statement on its website clarifying its stance on caffeine, saying it “does not prohibit the use of caffeine.” The Word of Wisdom, the church’s health code, specifical­ly bans hot caffeinate­d drinks, like coffee and tea.

Brant Ellsworth, an associate professor at Central Penn College in Summerdale, Pennsylvan­ia, specialize­s in the history of the church. He said its clarificat­ion about caffeine did not likely spur the popularity of soda shops in Utah. Ellsworth, who grew up in the church and went to Brigham Young University, said his mother “religiousl­y drank Coke” and his father “religiousl­y drank Diet Coke.”

“I know that Mormons

need to get their caffeine fix, and with coffee and tea being off the table, Dr Pepper can be the go-to staple,” he said.

Ellsworth, who wrote a chapter in the 2020 book “This is the Plate: Utah Food Traditions,” said soda shops “really are tonguein-cheek with the way they engage with LDS culture, its history and some of its practices” — pointing to drink names like the Missionary at Swig.

Durfey said the church’s clarificat­ion on caffeine has given many mothers, in particular, the freedom to indulge. Women make up a large majority of soda shop customers, especially mothers who grab a drink between dropping off and picking up children from school.

“Moms can’t function without caffeinate­d beverages,” said Durfey, a mother of two.

“We’re exhausted,” she said. “I don’t know a single mom who cannot

go through the day without some form of caffeine. I think that has definitely aided in the popularity of soda shops, because LDS women can’t have coffee, they can’t drink alcohol. So their vice of getting that relaxation, that energy, and that whole kind of ritual, I guess you could say — I feel like soda is their only option.”

The shops have also become popular with high school and college students for dates and hangouts, acting as a bar or coffee shop substitute for people who do not drink coffee or alcohol.

While the pandemic halted or shuttered many restaurant­s and bars, soda shops were able to stay open and thrive during the first few months of the pandemic, largely because of their drive-through lanes.

“It became a nice little escape from being stuck at home all the time,” Durfey said.

 ?? ASH PONDERS/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Gil and Avis Davies sip drinks at a Sodaliciou­s shop Nov. 20 in Queen Creek, Arizona, one of five now in the state. Regional soda-shop chains are spreading far beyond Utah, where they first found popularity.
ASH PONDERS/THE NEW YORK TIMES Gil and Avis Davies sip drinks at a Sodaliciou­s shop Nov. 20 in Queen Creek, Arizona, one of five now in the state. Regional soda-shop chains are spreading far beyond Utah, where they first found popularity.

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