Saturday, May 21, 2011

Rainforest Cola Review

Resembling the tourist favourite "the Rainforest Cafe," Rainforest Cola's sexy black background really allows the red text to seductively bounce into focus. The green frog should feel out of place, though it doesn't, as it prefers to complete the design rather than distract from it. Everything doesn't complement the package, however, and the main offender is the ascending sentence that buoys above the logo. The uninspired font clashes with the stylized nature of the nether, and it never really feels much like a selling point or point of distinction.

Rainforest Cola isn't for the mainstream diet Coke junkie. It lacks the famous bite commonly associated with the flavour genre, and it instead directs the attention to a braid of tamarind and acai. They both pleasure the others' company, and although the two are tasted distinctly from the other, they're together stitched into one of saccharine lace. As the flavour profile progress, it begins to mimic something of a coffee. It's entirely faint but remains wholly noticeable, and it dually complicates everything further as well as diverts the concentration. The prior has a certain creaminess to it that's tinted deeply of vanilla, however one does wish it was more cynosure. Citrus oils play a part in opening the experience for the former, an antipasto if you will. Lime is definitely detected and the transition into the initially discussed is seamless and preformed organically. During the movement, tangerine becomes an evident flavour, and it briefly rivals the lime for dominance before the main course dictates. It should be mentioned that the experience is sweetened by both real sugar and Stevia, and the combination isn't quite balanced. It feels dully sacchariferous and unsatisfying, but thankfully there isn't much in the way of the generally, though pitifully, accepted aftertaste. In the end, Rainforest Cola tries too hard to do too much, and it never really succeeds in any.

Well, doesn't this template look familiar? Anyway, there are thirty five calories and seven grams of sugar, which like previously stated, isn't enough. Green tea, and surprisingly the kola nut, appear, which is likely to of been involved in the creation of the confused flavour. Overall, Rainforest Cola's fifty cent cost at Job Lots doesn't quite excuse the cluttered execution.

official site

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