Are
you a fan of thirst-quencher ‘goli-soda’ – and would it make a comeback ? ~ and
do you know the relevance of Hiram Codd (1838 – 1887), an English engineer.
Set
against the backdrop of Koyambedu market, the film revolves around the lives of
four young boys: Pulli ( Kishore), Saetu (Sree Raam), Sitthappa (Pandi) and
Kuttimani (Murugesh). They work as coolies, and earn their bread by working as
lifters. They lift and transport vegetable goods to various shops. Spurred by Achi, they try to have an identity
in life .. .. ends up getting an old
godown from a rich Dada, who controls
the market. The mess started by them
makes them big !!
The atmosphere is
not hot ~ few months of chill in Tamil Nadu – in the hotter months, the
sweltering heat would leave one parched. You would think that an icy-cold soft drink
is the necessity ! – you go to any mall or any shop even it be a roadside one –
you get the multinational branded Coke or Pepsi and can enjoy the chill bottled
drink. It might appear to be refreshing
but actually it is not – it would neither reduce your thirst nor supplement you
in any manner. Loaded with sugar and
devoid of any nutritional value, carbonated soft drinks can only do harm. You can read that it contains – carbonated
water, sugar, caffeine, phosphoric acid, caramel colour and natural flavouring
but does not contain any fruit juice or fruit pulp, yes a fruit drink where
fruit is not a component in any manner.
An occasional soft drink would be relatively harmless but not when it is
consumed displacing nutritional food and beverage. The soft drink corporations are aggressively
marketing their products targetting children mostly through grand advertisements,
movies and promos.
Perhaps the
beverage industry sells more than any other industry does ! Inside Shopping
malls, departmental stores and even your neighbourhood friendly shops – you
find breathtaking array of soft drinks.
From the days when you had Fanta, Campacola and Goldspot backed up by
Kali Mark, Bovonto and Mapillai
Vinayakar in interior places, the industry has come a long way. Now you have too many brands of Cocoa Cola,
Limca, 7 Up, LMN, Slice, Maaza, Mountain dew, Slice, Sprite, Mirinda, Thumsup,
Pepsi – to name a few. The soft drink
industry has been growing at a hectic
pace and Coke & Pepsi have a lion’s share of the market. Some of the prime reasons for their success
would include – their advertisement, marketing technique, supply chain,
transportation, shift from returnable glass bottles to pet bottles.
But how the multinational
giants adopted means to subjugation of
desi bottled drinks industry ! is shameful.
Once upon a time, in the Indian Nation, there used to be a drink called
soda partnered by another variant ‘paneer’ soda (flavoured version). One could see handcart containing loads of
these bottles being delivered to road corner shops and they would sell in large
numbers. Tamilnadu was a place known for
political meetings and speakers. There
would be roadside public meetings attended by large number of masses. As the speaker would make an enthralling
speech, a supporter would come to the makeshift dias, open a soda bottle with
his hands and provide it to the speaker lauding his speech. It was a thirst quencher and had a pride of
place in state politics – it is another matter that the same soda bottle was
effectively used as a weapon to disperse crowds and make them run.
That is the story
of ‘Goli Soda’ - the bottled soda drink
which had a marble in its neck. It was
pure carbonated water commonly called soda (not the club soda of these days) –
it had a simple process of putting carbon dioxide gas under pressure dissolved
into water, making the drink fizzy and effervescent. A great drink which sold in great numbers
- can you spot them or would you be ok
in your child drinking it now ? - and
how did this transformation occurred silently !
By some token, soda
though local was not indigenous. Its
origin is traced to 1872 when British
soft drink maker Hiram Codd of Camberwell, London, designed and patented a
bottle designed specifically for carbonated drinks. The Codd-neck bottle was
designed and manufactured to enclose a marble and a rubber washer/gasket in the
neck. The bottles were filled upside down, and pressure of the gas in the
bottle forced the marble against the washer, sealing in the carbonation. The
bottle was pinched into a special shape
to provide a chamber into which the marble was pushed to open the
bottle. This prevented the marble from blocking the neck as the drink was
poured. This became extremely popular with the soft drink
and brewing industries.
The industry
thrived and flourished even in cities and they were sold near schools
also. I have seen some goli soda
factories in the vicinity of Triplicane though almost none exist today – all
eaten by the big fishes. The giant
competitors crushed these small units not only by competitive edge but also by destroying
the very fabric. For the small time soda
makers, the cost of soda and cost of retrieval was huge. A broken bottle would harm not only the man
but also the manufacturer. It is widely
believed that the Multinational giants resorted to buying the old bottles in
bulk and destroyed them ensuring that the supply chain for the soda industry is
broken. By breaking the very backbone
they ruthlessly restrained their competitors.
A close
friend of mine (V Koteeswaran) was an entrepreneur running a factory – Vela
& Co, in one of the narrow bylanes nearer the arterial Mount road
overlooking the famed LIC. The factory
was run on the family traditions, run jointly with the brother of his
father. Decades ago, it was roaring
business and around 10000 bottles were made and distributed to city shops when
there was tough competition from similar soda manufacturing units. Now virtually there is no competition – but
the production has trickled down to few hundreds. Not able to rely upon this product alone,
they diversified into making flavoured juices, milk, buttermilk and the
like. A bottled soda perhaps returns
them 20% of the sale price which in
these days is just not enough, as the turnover is modest to say it modestly. Life is tough !
·
The story line read
earlier was that of ‘Goli Soda (lit. Marble Soda)’, a 2014 Tamil movie written, cinematography and directed by S.D.
Vijay Milton. The film was distributed by N. Lingusamy's Thirrupathi Brothers.
·
In 1872, Hiram
Codd of Camberwell, London patented a bottle filled under gas pressure which pushed
a marble against a rubber washer in the neck, creating a perfect seal. This
became known as the Codd bottle. That was the precursor of ‘goli soda bottle’.
·
Unlike its previous
poor cousins, this version is priced at Rs.25/- per bottle !
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
5th Dec
2019.
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