Ottawa Citizen

Has Coke really never changed?

Like Twinkies or KFC, Coca-Cola appeals to nostalgia, vowing its recipe is unchanged, writes CANDICE CHOI.

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Coca-Cola keeps the recipe for its 127-year-old soda inside an imposing steel vault that’s bathed in red security lights. Several cameras monitor the area to make sure the fizzy formula stays a secret. But in one of the many signs that the surveillan­ce is as much about theatre as reality, the images that pop up on video screens are of smiling tourists waving at themselves.

“It’s a little bit for show,” concedes a guard at the World of Coca- Cola museum in downtown Atlanta, where the vault is revealed at the end of an exhibit in a puff of smoke.

The ability to push a quaint narrative about a product’s origins and fuel a sense of nostalgia can help drive billions of dollars in sales. That’s invaluable at a time when food makers face greater competitio­n from smaller players and cheaper supermarke­t store brands that appeal to cash-strapped consumers.

It’s why companies such as CocaCola and Twinkies’ owner Hostess play up the notion that their recipes are sacred, unchanging documents that need to be closely guarded. As it turns out, some recipes have changed over time, while others may not have.

Either way, they all stick to the same script that their formulas have remained the same.

John Ruff, who formerly headed research and developmen­t at Kraft Foods, said companies often recalibrat­e ingredient­s for various reasons, including new regulation­s, fluctuatio­ns in commodity costs and other issues that impact mass food production. “It’s almost this mythologic­al thing, the secret formula,” said the president of the Institute of Food Technologi­sts, which studies the science of food. “I would be amazed if formulas (for big brands) haven’t changed.”

This summer, the Twinkies cakes many Americans grew up snacking on made a comeback after being off shelves for nine months following the bankruptcy of Hostess Brands. At the time, the new owners promised the spongy yellow cakes would taste just like people remember.

A representa­tive for Hostess, Hannah Arnold, said in an email that Twinkies today are “remarkably close to the original recipe,” noting that the first three ingredient­s are still enriched flour, water and sugar.

Yet a box of Twinkies now lists more than 25 ingredient­s and has a shelf-life of 45 days, almost three weeks longer than the 26 days from just a year ago. That suggests the ingredient­s have been tinkered with, to say the least, since they were created in 1930.

For its part, KFC says it still strictly follows the recipe created in 1940 by its famously bearded founder, Colonel Harland Sanders. The chain understood the power of marketing early on, with Sanders originally dying his beard white to achieve a more grandfathe­rly look.

Fast forward to 2009, when KFC decided the security for the handwritte­n copy of the recipe needed a flashy upgrade. It installed a 350-kilogram safe that is under constant video and motion-detection surveillan­ce and surrounded by half a metre of concrete on every side — just in case any would-be thieves try to dig a tunnel to get it.

“Like something out of a Hollywood movie,” a press release from KFC trumpeted at the time.

KFC may very well be following the basic instructio­ns of the recipe encased in the vault. But the fanfare around its founder’s instructio­ns is despite his disapprova­l of the new owners of the chain after he sold his stake in the company in 1964. In his book, for example, Wendy’s founder Dave Thomas, a friend of Sanders, recounts how the colonel was annoyed because they came up with a simpler way to drain grease off the chicken by dumping it onto wire racks, rather than ladling the grease off by hand. Sanders apparently hated the new system because it bruised the chicken.

Sanders was afraid the new owners would ruin the chicken because he said they “didn’t know a drumstick from a pig’s ear.”

Coca-Cola and PepsiCo, America’s No. 1 and 2 soda makers, respective­ly, also are known for touting the roots of their recipes. In the book Secret Formula, which was published in 1994 and drew from interviews with former executives and access to Coca-Cola’s corporate archives, reporter Frederick Allen noted that multiple changes were made to the formula over the years.

For instance, Allen noted that the soda once contained trace amounts of cocaine as a result of the coca leaves in the ingredient­s, as well as four times the amount of caffeine.

Coca-Cola said its secret formula has remained the same since it was invented in 1886 and that cocaine has “never been an added ingredient.”

It’s a line that’s familiar to Terry Parham, a retired special agent for the Drug Enforcemen­t Agency. After the agency opened its museum in Virginia in the late 1990s, Parham, who was working in the press office at the time, recalled in a recent interview with The Associated Press that a Coca- Cola representa­tive called to complain about an exhibit that noted the soda once contained cocaine. The exhibit stayed and Parham said the DEA didn’t hear back from the company.

PepsiCo also celebrates its origins and in the past two years held its annual shareholde­rs meeting in New Bern, North Carolina, where Caleb Bradham is said to have created the company’s flagship soda in the late 1890s. But the formula for Pepsi was changed to make it sweeter in 1931 by the company’s new owner, who didn’t like the taste.

In the 1980s, Coca-Cola and PepsiCo both switched from sugar to high-fructose corn syrup, a cheaper sweetener. The companies last year also said they’d change the way they make the caramel colouring used in their sodas to avoid having to put a cancer warning label on their drinks in California, where a new law required such labels for foods containing a certain level of carcinogen­s. Both Coca-Cola and PepsiCo say the sweetener and caramel sources do not alter the basic formulas or taste for their sodas. And they continue to hype up the enduring quality of their recipes.

This past spring, for example, Coca- Cola welcomed the widespread news coverage of a Georgia man who claimed to have found a copy of the soda’s formula and tried to sell it on eBay. The company saw the fanfare as evidence of the public’s fascinatio­n with its formula, and eagerly offered to make its corporate historian available for interviews to fuel the media attention.

Likewise, the company is happy to reminisce about the backlash provoked by the introducti­on of New Coke in 1985. The sweeter formula was a marketed as an improved replacemen­t, and the company points to the outrage that ensued as proof of how much people love the original. According to the emailed statement from Coca-Cola, that’s the only time the company ever tried changing its formula.

The loyalty to that narrative is on full display at the World of CocaCola, where visitors mill about in a darkened exhibit devoted to myths surroundin­g the soda’s formula. Tabloid-style headlines are splashed across the walls and whispers play on a recorded loop:

“Even if you could see the formula, you wouldn’t understand it!” a voice says. “It’s the greatest mystery of all time!” says another.

 ?? DAVID GOLDMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A tour group enters the vault exhibit containing the ‘secret recipe’ for Coca-Cola at the World of Coca-Cola museum in Atlanta.
DAVID GOLDMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A tour group enters the vault exhibit containing the ‘secret recipe’ for Coca-Cola at the World of Coca-Cola museum in Atlanta.
 ?? DAVID GOLDMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A tour group waits for an interactiv­e experience to begin before entering the vault chamber containing the secret recipe for Coca-Cola at the World of Coca-Cola museum in Atlanta.
DAVID GOLDMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A tour group waits for an interactiv­e experience to begin before entering the vault chamber containing the secret recipe for Coca-Cola at the World of Coca-Cola museum in Atlanta.

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