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Phosphate soda

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A soda jerk at Franklin Fountain in Philadelphia holds up his phosphate bottle.

A phosphate, occasionally or colloquially called phosphate soda,[1][2] is a type of beverage flavored with a tangy or sour taste, using phosphoric acid as additive.[3]

These beverages appeared in the 1870s, following the advent of Harvard professor Eben N. Horsford who developed a process for "acid phosphates of lime" (patented 1868, later voided), and began promoting it as a health product. Some businesses realized that the taste of it was quite palatable to consumers when combined with sugar and water, and some innovator came up with the idea of combining it with fruit syrup and soda water, creating a new soda fountain drink.[3]

The standard types were the lemon and orange phosphates, but there were also egg phosphates with raw egg mixed in, or versions with malt extract, or wine, in combination with seltzer (carbonated water).[3] By the 1900s, the beverages became one of the most popular drinks,[3] so much so that "lemon soda" had become obsolete and non cost-effective, overtaken by "lemon phosphate" which became a top-seller at the soda fountain, which were also often installed at drug stores.[4]. Its popularity continued into the 1930s, when the trend shifted to ice cream-based parlor drinks.[3]

Phosphoric acid is still used in many bottled soft drinks, including Coca-Cola.[3] The original acid phosphate, made by Horsford's chemical company,[3][5] and was a mixture of calcium, magnesium and potassium phosphate salts with a small amount of phosphoric acid producing a liquid mixture with a pH of around 2 to 3, the same as freshly squeezed lime juice.

Horsford used bone ash, which is mostly calcium phosphate. In the 21st century, bone ash is used primarily in the ceramics industry, and is rarely available as food grade stock. The ingredients can, however, be synthesized from modern food-grade chemicals.

References

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  1. ^ Gilbert's Lemon Phosphate Soda: "[Act of March 19, 1920, Sec. 1 (b)] These Registrations are not Subject to Opposition". Official Gazette of the United States Patent Office: 266. 1929.
  2. ^ Ray, Rachael (2015). "Cremsicle". Everyone Is Italian on Sunday. Simon and Schuster. p. 376. ISBN 9781476766089.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Smith, Andrew F. (2007). "Phosphates". The Oxford Companion to American Food and Drink. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 451. ISBN 978-0-19-988576-3. Retrieved 1 April 2011.
  4. ^ White, E. F. (1921). "Soda Fountain Department: Leading Lemon Beverages". Midland Druggist and the Pharmaceutical Review. 55. Columbus, Ohio: The Midland Publishing Company: 283.
  5. ^ Gabriel, Joseph M. (2014). Medical Monopoly: Intellectual Property Rights and the Origins of the Modern Pharmaceutical Industry. University of Chicago Press. pp. 93–94. ISBN 9780226108216.

Further reading

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