Coke still doesn't get it. Julmust rules.

Coca Cola, the brown bubbly tries very hard each year to beat their Scandinavian arch enemy Julmust in sales, but fail miserably. This year, as always, they're leaving nothing to chance, the old commercial with the coke-trucks coming to town spreading holiday joy is played incessantly on all advertising channels, and Coke's ace card is a newly designed special holiday edition Christmas bottle. Still it's Christmas as usual in Sweden and Coke watches in horror as their market share of sodas drops down to near nothing.

Seems the marketing men of Coke will never understand why Julmust is the drink to put on the Christmas table. Coke's Swedish Marketing CEO Richard Sjöberg has tried to explain to Coke USA what Julmust is, and even sent them a few bottles so that they could taste it - he still hasn't received a reply.
Julmust was invented by the chemist Harry Roberts in the beginning of the 1900's as an alternative to drinks that contain alcohol, as a huge trend of teetotalism swept the land. The sweet and spicy Julmust flavor comes from 30 different spices, among them malt and hops, but the recipe is a well kept secret. Unlike Cokes so called secret recipe this one really is as only one man knows it, Göran Roberts, the grandson of Harry. Göran and his 15 employees are busy these days mixing the extract for Julmust which appears on 97% of Swedish Christmas tables (source: scoop).

Cokes ace card are these special edition Christmas bottles that carry the famous classic Santa illustrations made by Swedish descendant Haddon Sundblom. Reactions to these bottles are mixed, quite a few people have said it looks like bubble bath or something, and not a drink. As Swedes steer away from the giant Coke soda stands in the supermarket and towards their beloved Julmust, the Coke people in Atlanta scratch their heads at their miserable sales.

I've got some advice for Coke - give it up and spend your marketing money wiser. Be happy with the huge market share you have the rest of the year and stop trying to force Coke on us as a new tradition, we already have traditions thank you very much.

If you fancy some Julmust you can order Apotekarens Julmust off the web in November, December and the easter version in April from Northerner and Kristall Julmust from Swedish specialty foods. I'm drinking a Julmust right now, cheers!

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Robblink's picture

Just how does Julmust taste like? Similiar to Coke?

Dabitch's picture

Not anywhere near Coke's blah sugarwater - It's spicy and sweet, dark brown with a thick bubbly frothy head much like a beer. It can be mixed with beer to make Christmas beer (some people do that). The spice combo in Julmust is just one of those flavors like gingerbread and 'lussebullar' (saffron bread) it just tastes like Christmas.

Part of Julmusts charm is that you can only get it November December and April - and you'll drink so much of it you get a little sick of the flavor, until next November when you need your fix again. I've seen kids literally dragging their mums to the Julmust stand on the day that it is released begging her to buy some. Julmust is like all the other seasonal stuff, favorite foods to look forward to. No matter how many ads Coke runs they can't change that. It's like trying to replace the Turkey at Thanksgiving with a cheeseburger, and I sincerly wish Coke would just stop trying.

caffeinegoddess's picture

Coke does the Christmas packaging in the US too. I don't know effects sales in the US either.

caffeinegoddess's picture

Sounds tasty.

Dabitch's picture

dang straight it is! *burp* ooops, sorry. *hiccup* Want some? ;)

caffeinegoddess's picture

Sure! :D

andromeda's picture

Tastes like Christmas you say? You sold me right there - I'll be trying this exotic brown bubbly with the frothy head, sounds interesting.......

Does Coke not realise you already have a traditional drink or what? It does seem a quite waste of money to compete against a hundred year old tradition.

Robblink's picture

Julmust tastes just like Christmas? Then it must taste like last minute shopping, dysfunctional family dinner, maxed out credit cards a yearning to pound hard liquor!

Dabitch's picture

hehehe, yes, didn't I say some people mix it with beer? It's for the extra Xmas kick in the taste. ;))

God Jul Robblink, may you not suffer any of the above and have a nice christmas. I will!

AnonymousCoward's picture

Sounds deeeeeeeeeelicious! I just hope it tastes better than my plastic Christmas tree... ;)

And I guess it's only available in Sweden, right?

Dabitch's picture

Naaah.. Us Vikings still travel the world and we wouldn't be caught dead without a stash of JulMust! ;))
Pick up some Apotekarens stateside for US$2.30 under that link. Also, I suspect Ikea worldwide might stock some.......

deeped's picture

That's the light-version of "mumma" or much alike the old "Svagdricka".

deeped's picture

Which seems to be produced in Norway, Veikko says.