How to open Japan Soda called Ramune Drink. Why the funny bottle?

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 14 жов 2024
  • How to open Japan Soda called Ramune Drink.
    ! ! ! 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.lin...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 9 тис.

  • @1D10CRACY
    @1D10CRACY  Рік тому +895

    Per request, I've done a follow up video with answers. ua-cam.com/video/eGPAmDqSS0A/v-deo.html

    • @Goat_edit25
      @Goat_edit25 Рік тому +8

      In India in this exact same bottle with marble it is sold for less than 0.1$ 🤣

    • @1D10CRACY
      @1D10CRACY  Рік тому +7

      @@Goat_edit25 Interesting. All of the examples of India bottles I can find are more of a traditional Codd bottle. The Japanese version of the bottle has a special socket that the marble snaps into. The marble is also tougher to release and that is why they include the plunger. The traditional Codd bottle out of London that India uses you can press the marble down with your finger much easier. As far as cost, it varies. You can find these bottles in our local cheap big box stores like Walmart, but the Japanese restaurant tend to charge more for them.

    • @goldenealgefromdutchbros6834
      @goldenealgefromdutchbros6834 Рік тому +2

      "Ramune" (ラムネ) is a popular Japanese carbonated soft drink. The word "ramune" is pronounced as "rah-moo-neh" in Japanese. The "ra" syllable is pronounced with a rolled "r" sound, and the "u" in "mune" is pronounced with a short "oo" sound. In English, the word is often pronounced with the stress on the first syllable like "RAH-moon" or "rah-MOO-nee," but the Japanese pronunciation is closer to "rah-moo-neh."

    • @texhakathisia1712
      @texhakathisia1712 Рік тому

      f off if u arent gonna answer in one vid

    • @lisaboolee
      @lisaboolee Рік тому +1

      😎😎👏🎉🫂

  • @jaidattadethe
    @jaidattadethe Рік тому +3606

    In India, it is popularly known as goti soda. Reason for the glass marbles was to maintain uniform co2 pressure inside the bottle. The marble lifts up only at certain pressure. it helps the manufacture to maintain constant pressure in each bottle without the help of any sophisticated pressure machine.

    • @pri_11
      @pri_11 Рік тому +58

      I was about to type the same thing...so glad to see this😊

    • @wafiqahmed9394
      @wafiqahmed9394 Рік тому +70

      Yeah its called Goli soda and it tastes very good

    • @kotdwar_ka_rider
      @kotdwar_ka_rider Рік тому +20

      Pehle 8 rupe ki ek bottle aati thi 4 dost 2-2 rupe laake ek bottle se piya karte the....ab tw milni hi band ho gayi hein 😢

    • @invincibleparadox8934
      @invincibleparadox8934 Рік тому

      Dumb Indian....

    • @debojitrabha2502
      @debojitrabha2502 Рік тому +18

      Banta

  • @MrUNCLESAM84
    @MrUNCLESAM84 Рік тому +444

    The answer is simple! So it doesn't sprinkle all over the place when shaken or bumped while transported, the marble will resist the plastic pieces (or sometimes your thumb) so you'd know that there's over pressure in it.
    And even if you managed to drop the marble and break the seal the pressure will raise it up again to re-seal it.
    A Japanese gentleman once told me that when I was stationed in Okinawa.

    • @poopypooppants4635
      @poopypooppants4635 Рік тому +4

      "they used this style for bottle tops because it does bottle top things"

    • @scutifr
      @scutifr Рік тому +8

      It will still sprinkle all over the place when bumped or shaken, the bottle would have to be tipped over for the marble to block the hole. An actual cap would actually prevent the sprinkling and spilling

    • @MrUNCLESAM84
      @MrUNCLESAM84 Рік тому +5

      @@scutifr the pressure will raise the marble to block the hole, you're right if it wasn't carbonated beverage but it won't sprinkle if it wasn't.

    • @scutifr
      @scutifr Рік тому +3

      @@MrUNCLESAM84 gotcha. Although I still don’t see how the pressure would be enough to raise the ball into the hole immediately before liquid gets there, I will take your word for it because I don’t have experience with this type of bottle

    • @MrUNCLESAM84
      @MrUNCLESAM84 Рік тому +6

      @@scutifr me neither sir I've never tried it before I was told by a Japanese gentleman whom I would think knows about it more than I do. You do have a point to be honest I don't know how much pressure would be required to lift up the marble to seal the hole.
      Now you just gave me enough reason to make a trip to the Asian market to buy a couple of these bottles and perform an experiment 😂.
      Thank you and have a great day.

  • @bup_up
    @bup_up Рік тому +1336

    As an American I can say that I have had one of these before and its the most fun to open out of all the sodas I've had

    • @Pushin_kushin
      @Pushin_kushin Рік тому +8

      Melon is my favorite I drink those sodas hella

    • @woken5088
      @woken5088 Рік тому +4

      ​@John John the melon one was so good it's just expensive

    • @SailorYuki
      @SailorYuki Рік тому

      I've tried them too. But I don't have the physical strength to open one due to my disability. So I try and avoid those as much as possible.

    • @softwater34
      @softwater34 Рік тому +1

      I’ve had plenty in a couple states and the grape one is the best by far

    • @redbunny22
      @redbunny22 Рік тому

      these marbles are better for sling shots than industrial spray can marbles cuz the soda marbles are proper spheres.

  • @justacentrist4147
    @justacentrist4147 Рік тому +208

    The marble seal bottle is actually older than the cap top bottle. The marble seal originated in europe and was brought to japan. The Japanese continued to use the marble seal rather than switching to the bottle cap because of Japan's shortage of metal

    • @melfletcher2315
      @melfletcher2315 Рік тому +4

      Similar type bottles were used here in Australia, in the 1800s, very collectable now, and worth good money

    • @gordonh679
      @gordonh679 11 місяців тому +2

      Same in NZ, had a few

    • @IsraelFundedEpstein
      @IsraelFundedEpstein 10 місяців тому +6

      Thank you for delivering what this short Couldn't...

    • @fattywombat8087
      @fattywombat8087 10 місяців тому

      That’s why some place called soda pop

    • @psychwardsandSCENE
      @psychwardsandSCENE 9 місяців тому

      ​@@IsraelFundedEpstein attributing things to wypipo is considered rayciss these days

  • @SD1fruitbat
    @SD1fruitbat Рік тому +2236

    That is a Codd bottle. Designed in England in 1872. The method of opening is thought to be the origin of the word 'codswallop'.

    • @nicolekruschke1720
      @nicolekruschke1720 Рік тому +52

      I thought you was making stuff up but you're actually right about all that...

    • @nicolekruschke1720
      @nicolekruschke1720 Рік тому +72

      I didn't even know codswallop was a word

    • @sonickboom1
      @sonickboom1 Рік тому +30

      Obviously because of proximity to England you do find a lot of them in Irish rivers and like 2 canals that were used to transport goods. love them so cool!

    • @TH3-MONK
      @TH3-MONK Рік тому +17

      My teacher told me about this in primary school about 30 years ago.
      I was looking for this comment.

    • @VMM34
      @VMM34 Рік тому +19

      I've still got all the marbles I collected from the Victorian tip I'd dig in

  • @fremenondesand3896
    @fremenondesand3896 Рік тому +738

    my Dad said he used to smash open lemonade bottles for the marbles, nice to know Japan still makes them.

    • @Mopki3
      @Mopki3 Рік тому +5

      They've been popular at anime conventions in the US for decades.

    • @8BB76E1
      @8BB76E1 Рік тому +6

      But sadly, nowadays we have only those with that blue plastic top. There used to be full-glass version. But that's not made anymore.

    • @jeffomalley6015
      @jeffomalley6015 Рік тому +5

      ​@@8BB76E1 they have all glass ones in the USA

    • @devicemodder
      @devicemodder Рік тому +5

      i've cut open empty spraypaint cans for the marbles before...

    • @rosslee7300
      @rosslee7300 Рік тому +1

      ​@@devicemodder same here. But bcos I was curious what make the rattling sound though.

  • @venkyvc02
    @venkyvc02 Рік тому +883

    Just for people other than Asian here! These bottles are locally called in India as "Goli Soda" as Goli means the marble the creater is talking about. In our country we usually press the marble into the bottle using the finger as it was so fun to do. 😅

    • @1D10CRACY
      @1D10CRACY  Рік тому +73

      I am guessing the Goli Bottles are made very similarly to the Codd bottle that was invented in London. The marble presses up against a gasket creating a seal. The bottles in the video have a socket that the marble snaps into, making it rather difficult to press out with your fingers. I did a follow up video regarding the history of the bottle and the link can be found in the pinned comment.

    • @venkyvc02
      @venkyvc02 Рік тому +31

      @@1D10CRACY Actually we can push that marble into the bottle if we press the marble hardly inside. It's a fun activity we do everyday in our city. If you are ever in India ask for a goli soda and you'll be surprised people pressing it using thumb

    • @1D10CRACY
      @1D10CRACY  Рік тому +19

      The Goli Bottles look pretty cool for sure! The only Codd style bottle I could find in the states were the ones in the video, a bit of a modern knockoff. I checked some of our import grocery stores before I did the second video, but had no luck at finding them.

    • @LeopaldStraus
      @LeopaldStraus Рік тому +1

      Tablet Soda🤣

    • @Baronnax
      @Baronnax Рік тому +7

      I've always heard it being called a banta soda.

  • @exostudios8563
    @exostudios8563 Рік тому +42

    Funny thing I do every time I get one of these, after I finish the drink, I remove the plastic top to take the marble. I have a total collection of 247 that I have collected for over a decade.

    • @thatDUDEfromMAINE
      @thatDUDEfromMAINE 4 місяці тому +2

      i do the same thing with old spray paint cans. the rattle in the spray can is a marble

    • @godfell7341
      @godfell7341 3 місяці тому +4

      How do you get it off? Ive been trying

    • @exostudios8563
      @exostudios8563 3 місяці тому

      @@godfell7341 screwdriver and rubber mallet

    • @mike954
      @mike954 2 місяці тому

      ​@@godfell7341same here!

  • @ALaughingMan
    @ALaughingMan Рік тому +794

    Because that is how bottles used to be back in the day. It was once very common.
    Another fun fact, Ramune is romaji for Lemonade.

    • @ALaughingMan
      @ALaughingMan Рік тому +7

      @ArmaDelLion Lemonida Grande

    • @kurukuru4120
      @kurukuru4120 Рік тому +2

      Bruhh I never realized.

    • @ChrisD__
      @ChrisD__ Рік тому

      I love when that happens lol. Is it right to refer to this as "Ramune" or is "Lemonade" more correct? Or is "ラムネ" the only correct way to say this?

    • @inisipisTV
      @inisipisTV Рік тому +3

      ​@Chris D - It was based on the drink Lemonade served when Commodore Perry 'visited' Japan. A few years later a German merchant opened the first Soda company in Japan and named the brand being sold "Ramune" from the 'Engrish' word that the Japanese use in referring to the American drink.
      That Soda company is now gone, the word Ramune became a Generic word to this old time style soda, whatever the flavor.

    • @F0nkyNinja
      @F0nkyNinja Рік тому +1

      it should have been remonedu, sounds more like lemonade

  • @toradrow777
    @toradrow777 Рік тому +327

    For those wondering how it tastes: It's not bad. It's not as sweet and sugary as most sodas, but it's pretty good.

    • @julesking1303
      @julesking1303 Рік тому +14

      The strawberry flavor slaps

    • @toradrow777
      @toradrow777 Рік тому +7

      @@julesking1303 That's my favorite too, at least of the three flavors (original, orange, and strawberry) that I've tried so far.

    • @delo.3315
      @delo.3315 Рік тому +1

      Just tasted like sprite when i got ramune

    • @jesstech
      @jesstech Рік тому +2

      "But," you say, as if that's somehow a negative.

    • @cobrajr188
      @cobrajr188 Рік тому +1

      @@julesking1303 the melon one is my fav, lichee is really good too

  • @starlight4urheart
    @starlight4urheart Рік тому +1788

    I think the answer to the question is, “corporate told us we are NOT allowed to give customers an IQ test prior to buy our products.” then the designer said “hold my beer” 😂

    • @breadm8101
      @breadm8101 Рік тому +13

      I've honestly never met someone who opens them like this they just push the glass down with their thumb

    • @gavmansworkshop5624
      @gavmansworkshop5624 Рік тому +9

      And the designers beer was safe because nobody know how to drink from it.

    • @Ashahino
      @Ashahino Рік тому

      More like test subjects and iven a little mix of nanites to spy -._-.???

    • @starlight4urheart
      @starlight4urheart Рік тому +1

      @@gavmansworkshop5624 🤣😂🤣

    • @crazynachos4230
      @crazynachos4230 Рік тому

      ​@ahh thats just grand who said knowledge isn't free?

  • @qmbea7125
    @qmbea7125 11 місяців тому +3

    I read the comments, this clip united some world span of knowledge over several decades. This is awesome.

  • @dragonorbminecraft
    @dragonorbminecraft Рік тому +981

    The green watermelon flavoring of this drink is straight up magical

    • @kimkillillasfuq8212
      @kimkillillasfuq8212 Рік тому +22

      It's honeydew Melon, that's why it's green

    • @Wespa64
      @Wespa64 Рік тому +4

      sick profile pic bro

    • @DrCarlBooze
      @DrCarlBooze Рік тому +3

      I love this soda I am glad it finally made it to the states.

    • @Mzlady1212
      @Mzlady1212 Рік тому +2

      ​@@kimkillillasfuq8212 Exactly it's my fave one that I usually buy

    • @orxkk5320
      @orxkk5320 Рік тому

      Personally its mid and watery 🤷‍♂️

  • @milohdd
    @milohdd Рік тому +402

    Fun fact: the name "ramune" is just "lemonade" nativised into Japanese and then written in Latin characters (Japanese doesn't have an 'L' sound, so is replaced with 'r' hence ramune)

    • @FuhrerHeisen
      @FuhrerHeisen Рік тому +12

      Makes sense ra-mu-ne sounds close to lemonade in engrish

    • @AubreyLavigne
      @AubreyLavigne Рік тому +3

      "then written in Latin characters"
      Technically yes, but it literally has ラムネ on the front. ラムネ is the name, and it's transliterated into Latin script for convenience

    • @usobninja14
      @usobninja14 Рік тому +5

      Oooooooooh snap, godzirra makes so much sense now lol

    • @Fisherminer
      @Fisherminer Рік тому +1

      @@AubreyLavigne thats interesting, do you know why they didnt use レ? Like is it a full on loan word like ェィゴ? Guess it would make sense then.

    • @AubreyLavigne
      @AubreyLavigne Рік тому +4

      @@Fisherminer probably because "ramun" actually sounds closer to "lemon" than "ray-mun"/"remun". Also words often don't survive being borrowed into another language fully intact. Like, i know the name "John" is often written as "jon"/"ジョン", (sounds like "Joan") over "Jan"/"ジャン", which sounds closer

  • @ashwinkumar2294
    @ashwinkumar2294 Рік тому +2317

    It's called "Goli Soda" in Tamil, Malayalam, Kannada and Telugu 😅 we just pop open 'em with our fingers 😂😂

  • @RUDRANEELRAY-q4r
    @RUDRANEELRAY-q4r Рік тому +141

    Its the most popular and street basic soda in India during summer.. Called Banta Bottle

  • @StudioKelpie1993
    @StudioKelpie1993 Рік тому +450

    Fun Fact:
    Ramune is actually the invention of Scottish Chemist named Alexander Cameron Sim, who created the drink as a medicine, basically selling sugar water to treat people with low energy. He soon saw that his drinks were becoming so popular that he decided to sell it as a Soda Drink.
    He died in Kobe, Japan on the 28th November, 1900. He was actually the one who came up with the idea of the marbel in the drink bottle as well to stop it from spilling

    • @1D10CRACY
      @1D10CRACY  Рік тому +19

      Fun Fact, the bottle is a Codd Bottle. It was first patented in 1872 in London. Keep in mind, a patent does not mean invented. However Alexander Cameron Sim didn't start using the bottle until 1884. Also the marble does not prevent the bottle from spilling, we go over that in the video located in the pinned comments.

    • @kprajgaming4419
      @kprajgaming4419 Рік тому

      🤓🤓🤓

    • @dianp4824
      @dianp4824 Рік тому +3

      Imagine if the guy went to Japan not to associate with his nationality and after his death, people like you come up, find the facts and make portray him as the one thing he fought not to be remembered for LMFAO. That's just a made up story btw.

    • @WinterTM
      @WinterTM Рік тому +4

      ​@@kprajgaming4419 🤡

    • @andrewsamson384
      @andrewsamson384 Рік тому

      That’s white people for you 🤣🤣

  • @wrongturnVfor
    @wrongturnVfor Рік тому +518

    This used to be how soda was bottled in the old days. The reason why you can only pour from one side is because of table arrangement. Bottles are kept on one side and you dont wanna pick up someone else's bottle and pour into yours. Especially if they have different flavours

    • @richardgraham2303
      @richardgraham2303 Рік тому +14

      How in gods name did you know that. Excellent 👍

    • @wirebug42
      @wirebug42 Рік тому +5

      Wait what? How does only being able to pour from one side have to do with table arrangement? I feel like regardless of what side the bottle sits on, or whos you picked up, you would just spin it to pour out the right side, right? And how much you need to spin it would likely change every time the bottle was set back down anyways..?

    • @michaelwerbick
      @michaelwerbick Рік тому +1

      table arrangement is wrong... it is to KEEP THE MARBLE from stoping the flow..

    • @juliustaylor9920
      @juliustaylor9920 Рік тому

      ​@@wirebug42 this bottle was used a looooong time ago. so u may wonder why they did certain things, but it was just how times were back then.

    • @wirebug42
      @wirebug42 Рік тому +2

      @@juliustaylor9920 lol. I was asking how the OP would know why they did it. You just helped make my point

  • @AnishMurthy1297
    @AnishMurthy1297 Рік тому +425

    Fun fact, this is still how we serve soda in most of India!
    We call it goli soda, meaning ball soda. We typically open it with our fingers instead of a special opener. You can put your thumb over the open and lever it in to break the seal.
    We find it mostly being sold by street vendors with refrigerated carts who serve it with a mixture of herbs and spices to make what we call masala soda. It's very fun to watch and hear the pop, so it's especially popular for kids. I remember always asking for it as a kid when I saw the vendors.
    Edit: it's sold with lime, so it's actually a lime soda. Forgot to mention that. Also, it's also called Banta Soda in other regions of India.

    • @lioneldsilva1461
      @lioneldsilva1461 Рік тому +12

      It's called Goli soda in Karnataka.... And we have 10 flavors

    • @kevinashbridge9638
      @kevinashbridge9638 Рік тому +2

      Spice Soda? Man that would make my stomach act up

    • @109fr
      @109fr Рік тому +12

      ​@@kevinashbridge9638 it won't. It tastes quite good and refreshing.

    • @prasheel_ashok_shetty
      @prasheel_ashok_shetty Рік тому +8

      Searching for this comment 😃🤝

    • @kevinashbridge9638
      @kevinashbridge9638 Рік тому +1

      @@109fr is it salty or sweet? Never heard of spicy soda tbh

  • @tylerbakeman
    @tylerbakeman Рік тому +3

    The bottle itself was specially engineered to allow for the bottle to be open- while dealing with the pressure that was created by the inside of the bottle. At the time, it was a great invention- and today, is still awesome- as it can be ‘resealed’ by shaking the bottle (creating pressure with the soda, forcing the marble back into the original position).
    I’m pretty sure it’s not just used for Japanese soda- and I think it was invented somewhere in Europe.
    Cool bottle though- I’m glad you took an interest in them.

  • @brieb402
    @brieb402 Рік тому +1142

    Ah yes, Ramune. The soda you need a engineering degree to understand how to drink. That little marble was my biggest enemy.

    • @awkwardgamervrn4827
      @awkwardgamervrn4827 Рік тому +18

      Did you also struggle with word search puzzles?

    • @brieb402
      @brieb402 Рік тому +9

      @@awkwardgamervrn4827 Nope, was a pro at them actually. Its just those stinking bottles that made high school me look like an idiot.🤣

    • @TheStr8tshooter
      @TheStr8tshooter Рік тому +11

      @@awkwardgamervrn4827 I believe them to be speaking facetiously. Sarcasm is difficult to pick up by those of low intellect.

    • @archivefolds
      @archivefolds Рік тому +2

      I was so mad. I thought I was just twisted on too tight and ended up breakin the whole damn bottle tryna open it

    • @uwuLegacy
      @uwuLegacy Рік тому +6

      @@TheStr8tshooter a genuine reply to a sarcastic comment is not a reliable indication of someone missing the sarcasm

  • @pandurangabp
    @pandurangabp Рік тому +272

    In India we call it Goli soda. Goli means glass marble. This was our childhood paradise drink.

    • @krutarthpatel1991
      @krutarthpatel1991 Рік тому +7

      Loved the loud whistles-like sound it made when the bottle was opened.

    • @deus_ex_machina_
      @deus_ex_machina_ Рік тому

      ​@@krutarthpatel1991 That's the carbon dioxide coming out of solution and escaping past the small gap as the marble falls.

    • @chiggywiggy524
      @chiggywiggy524 Рік тому +10

      It's also known as "kanche wali bottle"

    • @harkrits.nagpal6505
      @harkrits.nagpal6505 Рік тому +6

      Yup we called it Banta in the north for the same, marble

    • @Dhirvij203
      @Dhirvij203 Рік тому

      ​@@chiggywiggy524👌

  • @SocietyOfDecency
    @SocietyOfDecency Рік тому +59

    Consumer focused packaging. Not only is it a fun experience but it keeps your soda fresh and fizzy for longer.

    • @nativeoutdoors1780
      @nativeoutdoors1780 Рік тому

      How does it keep it fresh or fizzy longer? It's literally the same as a can of soda it will be fizzy and fresh as long as a can

    • @SocietyOfDecency
      @SocietyOfDecency Рік тому +3

      @@nativeoutdoors1780 not at all. The only hole the soda is coming out of is covered by a ball when the bottle is in it’s upright position. Rather than a gaping hole having the carbonation freely flowing out of your soda it’s capped off. Now a bottle of soda would be different as it has a cap but certainly not a can.

    • @nativeoutdoors1780
      @nativeoutdoors1780 Рік тому +2

      @@SocietyOfDecency uhhhhhh broh you don't know how small co2 molecules are do yah? That little glass ball isn't holding carbonation at all after it's been pushed in

    • @SocietyOfDecency
      @SocietyOfDecency Рік тому +2

      @@nativeoutdoors1780 uhhhh my guy..... the same exact way Co2 still flows out of a bottle with the cap on it. Ever drank a bottle of coke from the fridge on day 2? Having something there is better than nothing. I'm sure we could pull out some sort of tool to measure the exact flow of molecules with or without something covering the hole. You're arguing for the sake of arguing at this point.....

    • @nativeoutdoors1780
      @nativeoutdoors1780 Рік тому +2

      @@SocietyOfDecency well I'm just arguing that the ball laying on top of the soda is preventing a trivial amount of co2 from escaping, which is my original argument that it doesn't keep fizz longer. But then again I digress, haha as you said it's just arguing for the sake of arguing it really doesn't matter

  • @Gilbertory
    @Gilbertory Рік тому +444

    This type of bottle is common in India. They contain club soda. The people usually use their finger to open the bottle. It is commonly called soda bottle.

  • @Bandit4557
    @Bandit4557 Рік тому +443

    Since no one seems to have clarified why the bottle design exists and only describes where it comes from, it exists to help keep the drink carbonated while the top is permanently open. The glass marble acts as some form of valve to regulate the release of gas from the bottle by restricting the airflow when you aren’t drinking it.

    • @brianspilner6944
      @brianspilner6944 Рік тому +7

      I would imagine that manufacturing standards are the reason. That given the materials and methods available, this was the cheapest way to go. That it was far easier create a marble within the tolerances necessary to seal the container, than any other medium. This created a seal that became stronger as the pressure it was under rose (to a point)... Yet could still be easily opened, once in that state.

    • @DoNotPushHere
      @DoNotPushHere Рік тому +18

      I don't know if they ever tested it but that simply doesn't work
      There is so much room around the ball for gas to escape...

    • @maltflesh
      @maltflesh Рік тому

      dope thx

    • @Nathan-jt8zt
      @Nathan-jt8zt Рік тому +21

      @@DoNotPushHereyeah that’s just bullshit. Once opened, the top is just as open as if there wasn’t any marble

    • @machiii7394
      @machiii7394 Рік тому +5

      Lmao no.

  • @tylersmith3139
    @tylersmith3139 11 місяців тому

    Back in the day(late 19th to early 20th century), this was pretty the only way to provide an airtight seal that wouldn't leak carbonation. As sealing methods got more advanced, they were able to start sealing bottles with metal caps with thin films underneath them which phased out three marble method of sealing in most of the world except for Japan and India.

  • @Ferrislilly
    @Ferrislilly Рік тому +587

    The struggle I had with one of these before I realized I needed that plastic cap. I thought kids with the strength of Thor lived in Japan

    • @GodsAppointedFN
      @GodsAppointedFN Рік тому +19

      It’s really not needed you just hit the marble with your palm

    • @Dr_Monitor
      @Dr_Monitor Рік тому

      Hell I just jammed it with my car key, did the trick.

    • @holohulolo
      @holohulolo Рік тому +2

      Some designs have that plastic thing attached to a plastic cap screwe to it. So you can pop marble in and then twist the cap off.

    • @laurenciozabala4296
      @laurenciozabala4296 Рік тому

      I feel for you my friend.

    • @Pepe_69
      @Pepe_69 Рік тому +1

      All of you here could have done it with your small Penises 🤣🤣🤣

  • @Ramo0os
    @Ramo0os Рік тому +168

    you can have a master degree just in opening this bottle 💀

    • @917439
      @917439 Рік тому +4

      This is just local goli soda you find in Indian villages, its just that Japanese have a plastic contraption to open while here we use just fingers

  • @joebarton4947
    @joebarton4947 8 місяців тому

    As I understand it marble sealed bottles are one of the first pressure holding containers invented. They are still used in some counties because they are relatively easy to re-use

  • @Azelethros_OG
    @Azelethros_OG Рік тому +304

    I love those sodas. They are all so very delicious, and it's fun to open them.

  • @indigocoolvinyl00
    @indigocoolvinyl00 Рік тому +283

    I love these things, a local grocery store has these in the asian section right next to the tofu sometimes and it took forever to finally find both flavors they carry. I still have the bottles and the marbles inside

    • @zbelair7218
      @zbelair7218 Рік тому

      Congrats.

    • @ZoltarrtheDestroyer
      @ZoltarrtheDestroyer Рік тому

      Are the bottles and marbles reusable?

    • @NickWeissMusic
      @NickWeissMusic Рік тому

      @@ZoltarrtheDestroyer sure you can reuse them, but it won’t re-seal anything unpressurized.

    • @nasunaoki4572
      @nasunaoki4572 Рік тому

      Both we have alot of flavors here in japan but its much easier to find

  • @Leenka_Kat
    @Leenka_Kat Рік тому +206

    FUN FACT!
    Most blue candy in America is blue raspberry flavored. Meanwhile most blue candy in Japan is ramune flavored.
    Ramune is a specific flavor of soda, but the company also has other flavors such as grape, lychee, and melon.

    • @jht3fougifh393
      @jht3fougifh393 Рік тому +7

      Really? I thought it was called ramune because it was the Romaji way of saying lemonade and that's what that line started as. Well at least that's what a Japanese woman I know told me. Can't vouch.

    • @Leenka_Kat
      @Leenka_Kat Рік тому +2

      Hm, I'm not sure. It might be, because I do know that soda in general was called ramune in the past. But now I just know it as the flavor and brand

    • @kiwirooks7299
      @kiwirooks7299 Рік тому +3

      I wish instead of bluerazz there was more just blueberry. Same with wishing there was more lime stuff than green apple. The standard flavors have gotten so tiresome, and I'm someone who only eats sweets like twice a year lol.

    • @Sheen023
      @Sheen023 Рік тому

      @@kiwirooks7299 may i ask where are you from? would you consider this as common feeling among the general public over there?
      Asking for educational purposes 😂

    • @stanleybochenek1862
      @stanleybochenek1862 Рік тому

      Meth

  • @joemama-ec9kw
    @joemama-ec9kw 2 місяці тому +1

    Instructions unclear, bottle exploded.

  • @dude9159
    @dude9159 Рік тому +397

    I truly enjoy Japanese soda, a childhood drink

    • @TEFLONDONTRUMP2024
      @TEFLONDONTRUMP2024 Рік тому +2

      I'm my neighborhood we had a Japanese lady that owned a party store and about 1/2 the store was Japanese candy and soda, good times

    • @jc1124
      @jc1124 Рік тому +2

      Does it taste different? Is it more about the different flavors?

    • @dude9159
      @dude9159 Рік тому

      It’s more about the different flavors, and the drinking experience. Idk, I haven’t tried it for years, but I do know where to buy them (in my area at least).
      Seafood City has them, but I’m sure you can find them in other places

    • @TEFLONDONTRUMP2024
      @TEFLONDONTRUMP2024 Рік тому +1

      @@jc1124 I remember a few tasty ones and few that tasted like wax kinda similar to trying random American sodas

    • @ethicalcobra4136
      @ethicalcobra4136 Рік тому

      I love these. Will have one on rare occasions

  • @Thorogrimm
    @Thorogrimm Рік тому +189

    Fun fact, an English inventor created this bottle design called the Codd bottle, and then later a Scottish pharmacist by the name of Alexander Cameron Sim introduced ramune to Japan in 1884

    • @kylethedalek
      @kylethedalek Рік тому +6

      The English guy was called Hiram Codd.

    • @i-love-comountains3850
      @i-love-comountains3850 Рік тому

      This is a neat resealable bottle too, once or twice. As long as you have pressure and the "key" you can reseal it 🤟

  • @bunnysidhu5064
    @bunnysidhu5064 Рік тому +118

    The soda bottles which usually were carbonated lemon drinks with a marble on the neck. The drink was/is called Buntaa in India.

    • @ftft3671
      @ftft3671 Рік тому

      Also it is continuing serving since freedom.

    • @KomalSharma-gn1sp
      @KomalSharma-gn1sp Рік тому

      yes

    • @yagnikbose8973
      @yagnikbose8973 Рік тому

      What?? I'm indian and have never had it. Can you please tell me where I can find this drink?

    • @thunderlyrics232
      @thunderlyrics232 Рік тому

      @@yagnikbose8973 on street food vendor. Who makes shijanki or lemon soda. It's very popular in Delhi

    • @chadboneman
      @chadboneman Рік тому

      I remember that since I was very young! Never seen it again tho

  • @ResurrectedElvenMonk
    @ResurrectedElvenMonk 3 місяці тому

    Had one for the 2nd time in my life this summer, strawberry is my sister's favorite flavor when I sent her one back home in Mexico.

  • @swaroop4una
    @swaroop4una Рік тому +82

    As an indian I call this a goli soda It's so fun to pop with an index finger pointing towards us and you are telling its complicated😂

    • @tamilan5553
      @tamilan5553 Рік тому +3

      Easy to open bro, I’m looking for this comment from a tamilan ❤

    • @warlord_0p
      @warlord_0p Рік тому +2

      Goli Soda 🔥🔥

    • @storiesandmist2428
      @storiesandmist2428 Рік тому

      Hehe i was waiting for this comment

  • @AKITA_Forever
    @AKITA_Forever Рік тому +24

    アメリカ発祥のものだったり、インドでも一般的だったりと色々面白いことを知れた。
    日本だと夏祭りの定番として、子供から大人まで好かれている飲み物。氷の入ったキンキンの水から取り出して、花火を見上げながら飲むんだ🎆最高だよ

    • @lj4nb
      @lj4nb Рік тому +1

      Yes,
      In kerala(a state of Republic of India) I used to drink it.
      But now days it is very rare in my area.
      Ofcourse we can buy it from a big shop. It always gives a nostalgic feel

  • @lilmake
    @lilmake Рік тому +83

    I remember drinking a yogurt flavored soda like this, when I was tweleve. I still have the bottle.

    • @rolltideroll8458
      @rolltideroll8458 Рік тому +1

      What is the brand called

    • @1337ik_
      @1337ik_ Рік тому

      how old are you?

    • @lilmake
      @lilmake Рік тому

      @@rolltideroll8458 I think the drink is called ramune. You should be able to find it on google.

    • @theinquisitor7191
      @theinquisitor7191 Рік тому

      Look like a dish soap. Not recommend.

  • @KingKillerArenaBreakout
    @KingKillerArenaBreakout Рік тому +5

    I got these all the time as a kid and it is still one of my favorite drinks. Also I'm pretty sure you are supposed to drink it from the bottle.

  • @ScottyFang
    @ScottyFang Рік тому +80

    These were a fave of mine in high school ^_^ I live in a pretty rural area so when mom & I had to make the monthly trip up to the city to change my braces, we’d stop off at a sushi place & they had em there 😊it’s like flavored 7-up but even better, UGH THE STRAWBERRYYYYY

  • @Kurohitsuji365
    @Kurohitsuji365 Рік тому +108

    My grandpa was born in the last year of Meiji era and start of the Taisho (1912). He said he used to drink it before going to live in Brazil (about the mid 1920’s).
    So that might tell you why the design is like that (it is a very old design that works).

    • @lancelnce
      @lancelnce Рік тому +3

      Sadly we don't have that kind of drink here in Brazil, I mean I was born in 1988 and never have see one like this before

    • @gabriellasso8808
      @gabriellasso8808 Рік тому +2

      ​@@lancelnceIt can be found at Liberdade neighborhood in São Paulo

    • @lancelnce
      @lancelnce Рік тому +2

      @@gabriellasso8808 I live far away from são paulo. I live in Rio Grande do Norte

    • @brendaburrow3745
      @brendaburrow3745 Рік тому

      Not in America lol

    • @gabriellasso8808
      @gabriellasso8808 Рік тому +2

      @@lancelnce Oh... Are there any japanese neighborhood in your city? Maybe some japanese market has ramune
      And I love the fact that we somos um monte de BR falando english nos comentários

  • @muthukumarannm398
    @muthukumarannm398 Рік тому +36

    It’s called Goli Soda in India. It’s common. You don’t need tool. Just strike the glass bead in against the pressure and you’re done.

  • @billydelacey
    @billydelacey Рік тому +1126

    Andy Kaufman was reincarnated as a Japanese drink bottle designer.

  • @dallasarnold9544
    @dallasarnold9544 11 місяців тому

    Fun fact.. we use this technique here in Japan… just slam your hand on top after taking the wrapping off.. don’t need to disassemble the top plastic piece

  • @teagunn
    @teagunn Рік тому +25

    In the UK victorian glass versions of these are often dug up. They are called Codd bottles, nicknamed "codswallop bottles" and are usually made of pale green glass.

  • @Herr_Gamer
    @Herr_Gamer Рік тому +75

    Literally learnt the entire history of this bottle design and it’s popularity in japan from a manga

    • @pabloagsutinnavavieyra2308
      @pabloagsutinnavavieyra2308 Рік тому +2

      What's the name of the manga dear internet person?

    • @Herr_Gamer
      @Herr_Gamer Рік тому

      @@pabloagsutinnavavieyra2308 Dagashi Kashi, pretty sure it has an anime as well. Comedy series about the son of a candy store owner and a girl trying to convince him to take over the business. Great artstyle and pretty good comedy. Plus, as initially stated, if you have an interest in foreign sweets, you’ll probably find something you’ve never heard of

    • @Herr_Gamer
      @Herr_Gamer Рік тому

      @@DecimusYna check my other reply

    • @Herr_Gamer
      @Herr_Gamer Рік тому +6

      @@DecimusYna Copy of my other reply: Dagashi Kashi, pretty sure it has an anime as well. Comedy series about the son of a candy store owner and a girl trying to convince him to take over the business. Great artstyle and pretty good comedy. Plus, as initially stated, if you have an interest in foreign sweets, you’ll probably find something you’ve never heard of

    • @Herr_Gamer
      @Herr_Gamer Рік тому +2

      @@DecimusYna give it a shot, I also recommend the author’s other works Yofukashi No Uta. Just a heads up, it’s better to read them vis fan scanlations as official translations suck all the life out of the language. Makes it way too sterile

  • @paulodeoliveira3368
    @paulodeoliveira3368 Рік тому +131

    There was a fizzy drink in Portugal in the 50's and 60's that used this exact mechanism. My mom told me about it. I miss her.

  • @TommyParkerJr
    @TommyParkerJr Рік тому +1

    This mechanism is actually a really old way of storing soda. Used in the early 20th century in Europe.

  • @Joseph_yy
    @Joseph_yy Рік тому +19

    This was how soda was bottled before the use of the twist cap, I’m from Taiwan( used to be a Japanese colony) and a friend of mine’s family used to own a small soda business half a century ago,this is what their soda looks like. They still have the machine for it too.

    • @ChrisAsia
      @ChrisAsia Рік тому +2

      I was just thinking that I have seen these in Taiwan before!

    • @redhawkneofeatherman261
      @redhawkneofeatherman261 Рік тому

      I wonder why this method was used first. Getting a marble in a bottle and securing it seems much more challenging than adding a screwcap

    • @Joseph_yy
      @Joseph_yy Рік тому +1

      @@redhawkneofeatherman261 I actually wondered the same question before, here are three possible reasons:
      1. The first Japanese soda (Ramune) was invented a few years before screw cap was invented.
      2. The harder the carbonated soda is push the marble, the better the seal, so it’s a guaranteed perfect seal while the earlier screw caps might not be as effective.
      3. Since both the marble and the bottle are made from glass, it’s easier to recycle and reuse, and because marble bottle aren’t that much more expensive to produce compared to screw caps( in smaller production) it’s actually more economical to do for a smaller business before the time of fully automatic mass production.

  • @eklavyagupta2160
    @eklavyagupta2160 Рік тому +84

    We have this in India as well from generations. It's called Banta, which literally translates to marbles balls. This was a way to preserve carbonation of water in the earlier days and it's one of the most refreshing drinks to have on a hot summer. Just pour some lemon juice and a bit of a chat masala in a glass and pour this drink into it. Do have it on a hot sunny day and it will refresh you from top to bottom. Cheers 🥂

  • @mmmm-ib1ed
    @mmmm-ib1ed Рік тому +352

    It's called "Goli soda" in Kerala 😅

    • @daasa.
      @daasa. Рік тому +19

      Bhai in India 😂😂 not just your Kerala
      😊

    • @mmmm-ib1ed
      @mmmm-ib1ed Рік тому +3

      @@daasa. lol 😅

    • @btxjo5440
      @btxjo5440 Рік тому +1

      Where is kerala?

    • @mmmm-ib1ed
      @mmmm-ib1ed Рік тому +1

      @@btxjo5440 bruhh

    • @mmmm-ib1ed
      @mmmm-ib1ed Рік тому +3

      @@btxjo5440 India

  • @stevenlowe9446
    @stevenlowe9446 Рік тому

    Thank you for this vid. I bought a bottle, and couldn't figure out how to open it, even with the printed instructions 😂

    • @1D10CRACY
      @1D10CRACY  Рік тому

      SMH.... do you really even need the instructions? ;)

  • @DeadHouseMouse
    @DeadHouseMouse Рік тому +13

    So in 11th grade one of my friends brought a bottle of ramune to school, and of course we were all fascinated, but we couldn’t figure out how to open it other than the peg had to go in the hole. We somehow skipped the part where the peg had to come off the rest of the lid, so we spent an unreasonable amount of time trying to push the whole thing back into the bottle. Eventually, I got the idea to take my heavy metal water bottle and proceed to hammer away at the thing before we realized “hey, maybe we shouldn’t smack a glass bottle really hard with the metal one”. I don’t even remember how we figured it out, but I remember that we eventually did.
    The real kicker is that we were maybe 20-30ft from the teachers, who just kind of watched the whole thing, complete with the roughly five minutes of loud, metallic clanging.

  • @RichHeart89
    @RichHeart89 Рік тому +7

    Codd-bottles are a British invention from the 1800's. Traditional wine bottles were thinner glass and the cork was a tight seal but could be pushed out if the internal pressure was too much. Soft drinks needed a way to deal with a higher pressure so the bottle had a thicker glass and that marble with a rubber fitting resting on top in it's own chamber would be an airtight seal but also it would be able to release some pressure built up in the bottle.
    Crown corks can withstand high enough pressure so releasing some of it isn't necessary anymore leading to longer shelf lives for soft drinks so that's why those marbles aren't used widely anymore

    • @Cjohn31
      @Cjohn31 Рік тому +4

      thanks,I've been reading comments for ten minutes trying to find out why

  • @mattsmedley.onehandedgamin9029
    @mattsmedley.onehandedgamin9029 Рік тому +166

    There's a certain place in hell for anyone who pours a cold fizzy drink into a coffee cup instead of using a glass.

    • @1D10CRACY
      @1D10CRACY  Рік тому +25

      LOL at least it's a cold place and not a hot place. ;)

    • @votpavel
      @votpavel Рік тому +1

      100%

    • @bluntslt8023
      @bluntslt8023 Рік тому

      Uhh screw you

    • @norddorian5791
      @norddorian5791 Рік тому

      Just drink it from the bottle

    • @alpharomeo404
      @alpharomeo404 Рік тому +1

      How does it matter, it's just another utensil/vessel?

  • @avalewis6572
    @avalewis6572 3 місяці тому +1

    OMG THANK U SO MUCH I WAS STRUGGLING SO MUCH! LOL

    • @1D10CRACY
      @1D10CRACY  3 місяці тому

      YOU ARE WELCOME! THIS VIDEO WAS CLEARLY MADE TO HELP YOU! IT WASN'T JUST A VIDEO MADE TO SHARE THE UNIQUE BOTTLE DESIGN! LOL

  • @mamamememoo
    @mamamememoo Рік тому +60

    Just realised Goli is Indian for marbles. :) Grew up in a multicultural country where kids play goli but never knew where the language for the term originated from until now. ❤

    • @TamilEelam1
      @TamilEelam1 Рік тому +3

      Indian isn't a language.

    • @SuperHotMan1000
      @SuperHotMan1000 Рік тому

      Indian!?!?! No its hindi💀

    • @shredder2cop
      @shredder2cop Рік тому

      It's the Banta drink in India....
      Who hasn't got a chance to drink it...

  • @akshaysinghyahoo
    @akshaysinghyahoo Рік тому +63

    As many other folks have pointed out, this type of bottle is abundantly available in India. It's known as "Goli" or "Kancha" Soda. Interestingly enough, you would rarely, if ever, find this in regular grocery stores or stroes in general. They are sold on the streets of the wooden push carts which are typical for Indian streets. They usually prepare a drink with this beverage by mixing it with lemon juice and a spice blend. Tasty stuff. Probably not the healthiest but definitely tasty.

  • @ratoh1710
    @ratoh1710 Рік тому +38

    The bottles are called Codd bottles and were invented in 1872 in London by Hiram Codd. They were the standard bottle for carbonated beverages until the introduction of bottle caps, after which they declined in use.

    • @matthewsibley3698
      @matthewsibley3698 Рік тому

      And apparently that's where the word codswallop came from

  • @Soulsworth69
    @Soulsworth69 8 місяців тому

    I love Ramune. It's so tasty and refreshing.

  • @alden1132
    @alden1132 Рік тому +33

    I love Ramune. I've got several in my drink fridge, right now!

    • @HughWoo
      @HughWoo Рік тому +1

      Weird how he pronounced it though. It’s “la-moo-nay” not any kind of ‘R’ sound in the beginning

    • @cutiebunnyamber3447
      @cutiebunnyamber3447 Рік тому

      ​@@HughWoohearing issues

  • @oricvinton77
    @oricvinton77 Рік тому +13

    Ramune is just Lemonade , the bottle was a common method here in australia right up to about the mid 80's aswell. Regularly dig them up in rural towns while doing excavation work (Like storm water drains) The fun part is collecting them here as bottling was usually done locally which the bottle would usually have the area stamped into the glass.

  • @RhythmAsian
    @RhythmAsian Рік тому +13

    Dude I find it so funny and interesting that some people have trouble opening these since I grew up drinking Ramune and I used to think that Ramune was a common drink in the U. S.

    • @toradrow777
      @toradrow777 Рік тому

      I personally only know of two places that sell it: My local Ingles grocery store, and the Spencers at my local mall.

  • @Discriminater
    @Discriminater Рік тому +2

    I love these kind of drinks, our local Chinese place has them for some reason even thought I’m pretty positive they are Japanese drinks (assuming by the writing on it) taste amazing and fun to open

  • @zyourzgrandzmaz
    @zyourzgrandzmaz Рік тому +19

    I remember trying to drink out of these as a kid and just getting little dribbles. Never knew the poring technique

    • @Umoddafokka
      @Umoddafokka Рік тому

      So many pores. 😂

    • @MimiYuYu
      @MimiYuYu Рік тому

      Pouring?
      Anyway the marble can also used to close the soda if you want to finish it later. Drink with the bottle bottom tilted up and when the flow is hindered by the marble then you stuck as hard as you can to pull the marble through. It’ll get stuck in the rubber portion of the opening

    • @zyourzgrandzmaz
      @zyourzgrandzmaz Рік тому

      @@MimiYuYu you've never had these before or you'd know you cannot reseal it with the marble

  • @lornaginetteharrison7168
    @lornaginetteharrison7168 Рік тому +9

    I can imagine a scenario where I’m trapped somewhere in Japan, with a roomful of Ramune drinks that _could_ keep me alive, but I’d die of dehydration long before anyone found and rescued me *because I can’t work out how to open the damned bottles!*
    But after watching this video, I will now survive (Yay!). Thank you!☺️

    • @scvmbag707
      @scvmbag707 Рік тому +1

      are you could read the instructions printed on the label the internet has made people stupid

    • @lornaginetteharrison7168
      @lornaginetteharrison7168 Рік тому

      @@scvmbag707 If I’m trapped (in my hypothetical example), I’m probably not going to have access to the internet! 🤣

  • @dannychung5962
    @dannychung5962 Рік тому +74

    I heard Ramune looks and is called such because it's based on how soft drink was in America, and Ramune is just the Japanese trying to say "lemonade"

    • @HughWoo
      @HughWoo Рік тому +3

      Makes sense in a way since it’s actually pronounced “la-moo-nay”

    • @MimiYuYu
      @MimiYuYu Рік тому +1

      Omg this makes so much sense now

    • @jackkraken3888
      @jackkraken3888 Рік тому +2

      That's lacist!

    • @FlyingWombats
      @FlyingWombats Рік тому +1

      ​@@jackkraken3888 😂

    • @8BB76E1
      @8BB76E1 Рік тому +1

      Yup, that's actually true.

  • @DJCheese77
    @DJCheese77 Рік тому +5

    The soda itself is absolutely the best drink I've had in my life, and the bottles are so unique too. I got like 5 of these in China Town Chicago for my 7th grade field trip.

  • @adibahmed10
    @adibahmed10 Рік тому +33

    From what I've heard, it's supposed to restrict you from drinking all of it at once. The marble is holding back the drink so you don't go overboard. So you can enjoy the drink longer and practice drinking calmly.

    • @majormanfredrex
      @majormanfredrex Рік тому

      If the bottle is held with the indentations upward when tilting it to drink, the flow is restricted and vice versa.

  • @TheWolvesCurse
    @TheWolvesCurse Рік тому +65

    my favourite sushi place in darmstadt germany has these in 3 different flavours. i love those drinks. sweet and tasty.

  • @EddyOfTheMaelstrom
    @EddyOfTheMaelstrom Рік тому +8

    Worth every second because once you get it open, that is liquid heaven inside.

  • @Dalia-fw8wz
    @Dalia-fw8wz Рік тому

    you get one crisp forehead kiss for this video ty sir

  • @MrRobuo
    @MrRobuo Рік тому +4

    Word is, the ASMR experience of the little ball tumbling around while drinking Ramune on a hot Japanese summer day, has created many fond memories for generations of Japanese children

  • @sparky2057
    @sparky2057 Рік тому +65

    When you've advanced so much as a society that you start putting puzzles for your drinks.

    • @beingatliberty
      @beingatliberty Рік тому +11

      It’s the original way soft drinks were packaged invented in England - codd bottle

    • @lookatthis9972
      @lookatthis9972 Рік тому

      Weeb

  • @HellenAndYohei
    @HellenAndYohei Рік тому +73

    I'm a Japanese guy who never knew about the indent thing. Thought it was just supposed to stop no matter what haha

  • @Isnometooiisaman
    @Isnometooiisaman Рік тому +102

    In India, most if not all soda bottles where made in this way. Childhood memories!!

    • @VladamireD
      @VladamireD Рік тому +2

      It's a style that actually pre-dates bottle caps, all soda bottles used to be done that way everywhere.

    • @piercelawless2654
      @piercelawless2654 Рік тому

      Always behind 😂

    • @argaming_9699
      @argaming_9699 Рік тому

      yeah goli soda

    • @nichderjeniche
      @nichderjeniche Рік тому

      ​@@VladamireD everywhere? I doubt that. Never heard about that before in Europe.

    • @VladamireD
      @VladamireD Рік тому

      @@nichderjeniche Probably because Codd-neck bottles went out of fashion in most places (outside of India and Ramune in Japan) absolute ages ago (it was invented in 1870's in the UK and spread throughout Europe and the Commonwealth). It was replaced by external closures and caps eventually, much like it replaced corks in soft drinks, mineral water, and beer.

  • @StandTallTx
    @StandTallTx 8 місяців тому

    I've had these before. They're delicious!

  • @hkoizumi3134
    @hkoizumi3134 Рік тому +4

    I used to drink this all the time in Japan when I was a kid. That design saved me countless time when I dropped or tipped the bottle.

  • @sambaker3233
    @sambaker3233 Рік тому +46

    This type of bottle was common in New Zealand in my grandparents time. It's called a Codd Neck bottle

    • @casper4542
      @casper4542 Рік тому

      I'm a kiwi & never knew that

  • @ARVash
    @ARVash Рік тому +59

    It's useful to have a drink that doesn't spill much most of the ways you turn it.

  • @mrtracing3292
    @mrtracing3292 11 місяців тому

    Idk about many other places but they used to have these in the UK in the 60s and 70s I can remember kids used to break them for the marble ball inside good times

  • @lazzynomad
    @lazzynomad Рік тому +15

    It's a Japanese tradition to break the bottle on the sidewalk and take marble. During the summer it's common to see piles of glass on street corners.

  • @scoutkbartholomew722
    @scoutkbartholomew722 Рік тому +6

    Back in the day at festivals, they always kept the bottles. I assumed they just recycled them. It was easier to close back up with pressure

  • @kawaiikittylover23
    @kawaiikittylover23 Рік тому +35

    Ramune drinks are good. It's just hard to open the drink when ya keep on pressing on the cap down but it won't work(pipsqueak and smol maximum strength lol). So I'd usually ask someone to open it. Best to do it over the sink to avoid spill overloads.

  • @danl.2220
    @danl.2220 Рік тому

    Im very glad I stuck around for the answer of why they made the bottle this way.

    • @1D10CRACY
      @1D10CRACY  Рік тому +1

      That makes me feel a lot better about making the follow up video found in the pinned comments. Thanks!

    • @danl.2220
      @danl.2220 Рік тому

      @@1D10CRACY lol, sorry didnt see that

  • @Bar-Del
    @Bar-Del Рік тому +8

    I go to g fest every year and there's always a stand there that sells Ramune and I always get a few and drink them through out my stay at the hotel. Very cool love opening them lol

  • @RummerChan
    @RummerChan Рік тому +21

    The melon flavor of Ramune is so good. I wish western companies would embrace the melon flavor like a lot of eastern companies have, it's so good.

    • @jrodcollections3764
      @jrodcollections3764 Рік тому

      There’s a GFuel mix called MS-M31-0N Ramune Melon. It is spot on. The first time I tried it, I had flashbacks to the handful of times I had Ramune as a kid. If you can handle the caffeine, there are 40 serving tubs on their website

  • @IamnotJohnFord
    @IamnotJohnFord Рік тому +5

    We get these at a local Chinese restaurant. My daughter loves em because as a family we rarely drink sodas, and they are fun to open.

  • @kyol420
    @kyol420 2 місяці тому

    This is the, "Place, but Japan" meme in person.

  • @FreshlySnipes
    @FreshlySnipes Рік тому +11

    I loved those growing up. Whenever we took a trip to Japan Town we would all get them.

  • @PuppyLuvU2
    @PuppyLuvU2 Рік тому +4

    Love these drinks. The melon flavored is especially good with vanilla ice cream. Usually I hold the bottle under my shirt to keep the opener in place to open it easier since then I can just hit it real quick to pop it open.

  • @sumantasingha664
    @sumantasingha664 Рік тому +78

    pure Japanese summer vibe

  • @hbestinternetwatch
    @hbestinternetwatch Рік тому

    In our childhood we used to drink nimbu soda in these bottles. You get it even at the TTD temple. Few hot humid places has these refreshments!

  • @NanashiCAST
    @NanashiCAST Рік тому +97

    This is called codd-neck bottle, I believe. Came from the brits.
    Was designed to withstand internal pressure.
    Kids love it in Japan because of the marble, mostly. and its great because you can leave them alone with it for about an hour or so as they try to pry the cap off and get the marble out.

    • @powerfulberry237
      @powerfulberry237 Рік тому +1

      Ah yes. It's great "we can leave kids for an hour" because taking care of something yall are responsible for giving birth to is such a hassle
      If people don't reproduce without thinking then you wouldn't even need to get these or whatever toys just to help you ignore the kids for just 1 hour every time.

    • @mowtow90
      @mowtow90 Рік тому +17

      @@powerfulberry237 The thing is ,life continues. You cant keep an eye on your kid 24/7. You have to cook , clean , wash ,lanudry , work ext. Its just an easy way to keep the kid occupied in 1 place - a.k.a doest go and brake something, draw on the wall or the other milion hazards that kids do ,so you can do what has to be done.

    • @zkid001
      @zkid001 Рік тому

      @@mowtow90 its sad u even have to say this. What a shmuck that guy is

    • @czar17_28
      @czar17_28 Рік тому +9

      @@powerfulberry237Or maybe kids are just interested in simple things and as a parent you let them enjoy it?

    • @felixthegreater
      @felixthegreater Рік тому +5

      @@powerfulberry237 There's a Russian saying "Чем бы дитя не тешилось, лишь бы не орало", which essentially means that if a kid is doing something harmless and they're happy, you should leave them to it, lest they throw a tantrum out of boredom. Playing with a marble in a bottle is not the same as watching an iPad or TV for hours.

  • @chrisvisser-fee2631
    @chrisvisser-fee2631 Рік тому +10

    I have never been to japan, but I have such a clear memory of getting a bottle like this once. I don't remember where, or when, I just remember the bottle with the little marble, and the taste of the drink.

  • @someirishfella1704
    @someirishfella1704 Рік тому +5

    If you're wondering why this idea stayed around in Japan I asked a Japanese born friend of mine, Japanese people lead a mindful life , they don't like that instant results instant gratification thing unless it's in situations like when they're caught for time or need the convenience, such as single person meal vending machines, so this bottle makes you do a set of steps to open it , and in turn causing you to be more mindful of something simple like having a drink, you should see the way tea is made , very methodical approach

  • @fahadbintaher7
    @fahadbintaher7 Рік тому +18

    It's popular in South India tamil Nadu... They have similar bottle and called Gali soda.... I loved it....