Friday, August 19, 2011

Ribena

Herm..td bkak puase ngan ribena..perghh sdap gler...

MENYEGARKKANNNN......

sblum nie asik mnum soya je..agak mmbosankan suadahh...
so tba2 td trigin lak nk mnum ribena...... sblum nie x bpe nk ske sgt ngan rebina... tp td rse sdap lak...



ha' nk share somethin' about rebina... 

Ribena was originally manufactured by the Bristol-based food and drink company HW Carter as a blackcurrant squash. Development research into pure fruit syrups for the manufacture of milkshakes had been done at the Long Ashton Agriculture and Horticulture Research Station in north Somerset using apectinase enzyme process; Ribena was essentially invented there by Dr. Vernon Charley. The blackcurrant variety was found to contain high levels ofvitamin C. The drink was launched in 1936 under the name Ribena (from the botanical name for the blackcurrant, Ribes nigrum). During the Second World War, other fruits rich in vitamin C, like oranges (from Florida), became almost impossible to obtain in the United Kingdom, due to the U boat campaign. Blackcurrant cultivation was encouraged by the Government, and the yield of the nation's crop increased significantly. From 1942, almost the entire British blackcurrant crop was made into blackcurrant syrup (or cordial), almost all of it manufactured by Carters, and distributed to the nation's children for free without the Ribena brand name, giving rise to the lasting popularity of blackcurrant flavourings in Britain. Production moved to the new Royal Forest Factory[1] at Coleford in the Forest of Dean in the autumn of 1947, where production takes place today. Carters was bought out by the Beecham company (later to become SmithKline Beecham and later GlaxoSmithKline) in 1955.

There have been various incarnations of carbonated "Sparkling Ribena", sold in cans — throughout the 1980s and early 1990s there was a can-based version simply named "Ribena". In about 1993, "Ribena Spring" was launched, a gently carbonated version in ready to drink bottle form, which was discontinued and replaced with "Ribena Spark", another can-based carbonated edition, in the late 1990s, a product which is still being produced today. (Ribena spark now discontiued 2011)





bler nab tgk video nie cam 2 r prsaan bler bkak puse mnum rebina....



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