
A stark, albeit fake and dull pomegranate taste begins the experience. It has a mild and bland synthetic sweetness and a rough margin of carbonation. The sweetness doesn't taste artificial per se, but it lacks a certain energy and robust facet that distinguishes it from real sugar. The pomegranate has an adjunct blueberry that's suffocated partially by the harsh carbonation; the fruit is only allowed the occasional opportunity to breath itself into the initial fruit. The blueberry does a desultory dip into a cranberry taste that momentarily cloaks the submerged, and adds a sordid tartness that halfway resembles the pungency of a bygone dairy product. The experience then approaches its demise, and along with the subtle but steady weakening of all the prior, there's slight addition of a grape that doesn't taste actual but instead more like an essence. Overall, Loop s/f Blue Pom's flavour often reminded me of Moxie Thunder, which wouldn't of been my first choice if I was to try and mimic another drink's taste.
Loop Sugar Free Blue Pom's energy ingredients are much like others in the line: caffeine, taurine, inositol, and a variety of B vitamins. I received slight jitters, a kick that lasted two and a half plus hours, and no crash. All in all, Loop Sugar Free Blueberry Pomegranate retails for only a dollar, which isn't bad until you consider all the other drinks that also run that much.
1 comment:
Sugar-free Loop is a favourite of mine. It's like the original LOOP with Blu POM except it has the 'diet' taste that I prefer.
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