History of Mountain Dew

THE UNKNOWN HISTORY OF MOUNTAIN DEW

© History Oasis

While war, social change and technology transformed the 20th century American landscape, an unlikely beverage was simultaneously writing its own curious chapter in the annals of history.

The tangy citrus soda Mountain Dew charted an improbable course from rough-hewn Appalachian origins to iconic mass-market sensation embraced by generations.

First conjured in hills and hamlets far from the American mainstream—this neon-hued nectar’s emergence as a defiant counter-culture symbol during the tempestuous 1960s presaged Dew's eventual ubiquity across the nation in bottles and cans cracking open everywhere from hip city streets to small town supermarket aisles.

ORIGINS OF MOUNTAIN DEW

Mountain Dew vintage ad
Source: Mountain Dew

The curious history of Mountain Dew traces back to Tennessee bartenders Barney and Ally Hartman, who in the 1940s found existing soda options dissatisfying as mixers for whiskey and thus crafted their own carbonated concoction.

Seeking an elusive, high-proof flavor evocative of backwoods moonshine known colloquially as "mountain dew," their citrus creation would evolve from niche regional mixer to eventual nationwide sensation under Pepsi-Cola's distribution.

Though Mountain Dew no longer contains alcohol, its distinctive tangy-sweet profile continues to hint at its origins behind the bar.

THE NAME "MOUNTAIN DEW" WAS ORIGINALLY SLANG FOR MOONSHINE

moonshine
© History Oasis

Beyond its origins behind the bar, Mountain Dew's provocative name further evokes its niche roots, as "mountain dew" had already entered the Appalachian lexicon by the late 19th century as colorful slang for high-proof distilled spirits (moonshine) crafted illicitly in the hills.  

Though no whiskey touches the modern neon bottle, the drink's moniker continues to celebrate its history as an outlaw mixer crying out to be blended with white lightning in mason jars.  

Indeed, the Mountain Dew brand itself was built on devilish defiance of the law and honoring Southern tradition, thus making its early adoption as hip counterculture symbol all the more fitting.

A REVISED FORMULA FOR MOUNTAIN DEW WAS CREATED IN 1958 BY BILL BRIDGFORTH

Mountain Dew vintage ad
Source: Mountain Dew

While the Hartmans first tapped the fountain, it was Marion, Virginia beverage chemist Bill Bridgforth whose retooled formula in 1958 truly perfected Mountain Dew's singular profile, resolving the drink's formidable carbonation issues through diligent tinkering.

Bridgforth's breakthrough would prove the tipping point, his revised Dew supplying the sturdy foundation for the brand's commercial rise under licensee Tip Corporation and lending Mountain Dew the technical refinement to charm Pepsi-Cola's corporate palate in time.

Though Bridgforth's name remains obscure even as Dew's glows ever brighter, his fine-tuned formula secured the drink's place in beverage history.

IN 1964, PEPSICO ACQUIRED THE RIGHTS TO MOUNTAIN DEW

Pepsi vintage ad
Source: PepsiCo

The diminutive Tip Corporation had carried Mountain Dew far, but it was cola titan Pepsi-Cola who truly tapped the brand's potential, acquiring its little-known rights in 1964 with ambitions to scale Dew nationally through their indomitable distribution.

Once but a niche Appalachian oddity, under Pepsi's stewardship Mountain Dew surged coast-to-coast in short order, finding mass appeal from California beaches to New York streets as the soda wars raged.

Now an iconic American staple available most everywhere, Mountain Dew ultimately has PepsiCo to thank for freeing it from small town shackles to emblazon the Dew mark across the nation in neon green.

ORIGINALLY, MOUNTAIN DEW'S INGREDIENT COMPOSITION INCLUDED BROMINATED VEGETABLE OIL

© History Oasis

Though Mountain Dew's original formulas relied on the emulsifying powers of the chemically-derived brominated vegetable oil, concerns about the additive's potential health effects saw it banned across food industries from Europe to Asia even amidst continued American usage.

While the neon nectar's maker long defended brominated vegetable oil as FDA-approved, once social media-fueled backlash went viral, even staunch defiance of food freedom fighters couldn't compete with cutting-edge consumer consciousness.

PepsiCo stealthily excised the controversial stabilizer in 2012 to maintain Dew's market domination, eliminating the long-running ingredient just ahead of a 2020 tidal wave of new bans.

MOUNTAIN DEW HAS GIVEN RISE TO URBAN LEGENDS ABOUT REDUCING SPERM COUNT

Mountain Dew vintage ad
Source: Mountain Dew

The vivid yellow-green hue that so defines trademark Dew emerges not from sunlit limes but molecular tartrazine, an artificial color whose reputation became stained by sinister urban legends.

Though no scientific study ever bore out the sinister fables of shriveled fertility that so attached themselves to tartrazine like some nefarious phantom ingredient, the chemical still elicits raised eyebrows and paranoid whispers in internet echo chambers.

Alas, while the dye's toxicity exists more in rumor mills than medical journals, for many the sight of Dew now conjures thoughts not of sweet refreshment but the horror stories of generations yet unborn.

IN 2009, A MYSTERY DORITOS CHIP FLAVOR CALLED "QUEST" TURNED OUT TO BE MOUNTAIN DEW FLAVORED

Doritos vintage ad
Source: Doritos

Seeking to tantalize taste buds while building buzz in 2009, Doritos stealthily slipped a new incognito flavor onto shelves, cryptically branded under the code name "Quest" while daring fans to guess the secret zesty identity.

As speculation swirled, the answer ultimately proved more surprising than any fan theory, with the mystery bag revealed as a true unicorn of colliding salty and sweet worlds: chips capturing that unmistakable electric tang and citric spark of Dew itself.

The unlikely fusion vanished as quickly as it appeared, leaving lingering memories of an oddball artifact from marketing imagination's fever dream.

Those who sampled this curiosity may forever associate that neon soda rush with sharp corn crunch henceforth.

THE COMPUTER WORM CODE RED WAS NAMED AFTER THE PROGRAMMER WHO DISCOVERED IT WAS DRINKING MOUNTAIN DEW CODE RED AT THE TIME

Mountain Dew Code Red logo
Source: Mountain Dew

When the virulent "Code Red" computer worm began wreaking havoc in 2001, speculation swirled about the origins of its menacing sobriquet.

As it happened, the cyber threat traceable took its namesake directly from a can—specifically, the Mountain Dew Code Red variety cracked open on the desk of the beleaguered programmer first ringing the alarm.

Downing the Dew proved poor defense against digital demons, yet an apt if accidental christening, the software nasty spreading across networks as rapidly and disruptively as its caffeinated namesake once flooded thirsty mouths.

Thus, while no connection beyond coincidence, in just one more curious bit of trivia this famed exploit would forever mark Dew's own small role in internet infamy.

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