Happy Ramune Day
Today is Ramune Day, marking the 137th anniversary of the famous Japanese soft drink's manufacture in Japan. A carbonated beverage with a lemon-lime taste, Ramune is fun to drink because of the glass ball at the top, which closes if you try to swig it too fast. While a fun novelty now, using a glass ball to seal in carbonation was quite high tech back when it was invented by British engineer Hiram Codd in 1872, quickly spreading to Japan through traders. Originally a corruption of the English word "lemonade," Ramune was a favorite of sailors in the Imperial Navy during World War II, and is closely associated with summer festivals today. The sign of a Ramune bottle is sure to cause Japanese to exclaim natsukashii! (nots-ka-SHEE), meaning "nostalgic," and I've known many Japanese to fondly tell me of the days when they were so poor all they had to play with were the glass marbles from Ramune bottles, which makes me wonder if this isn't some kind of shared group memory or something. The Ramune brand isn't owned by any one company but (like the Kewpie Doll) is generic, manufactured by several different bottlers throughout Japan. While we don't sell Ramune itself (too difficult to ship glass bottles internationally), J-List has dozens of great Ramune-themed items, from our logo T-shirt to delicious snacks and gum, and even the fun Ramune-scented parody pen.

Ramune is a popular icon of the past in Japan, and for us gaijin, of how fun and wacky Japan can be.



6 Comments:
I have a few bottles of the orange ramune in the fridge now. I get it from the Asian Food Grocer in San Fransisco.
3:04 AM
Great. Did you know they have kim chee and curry ramune? I don't know why??
3:53 AM
Nor do I, sir, nor do I.
But I WANT SOME!! Is that so wrong?!
4:44 PM
They also have a pineapple flavor, but it's always sold out. I am curious.
1:54 AM
Here in Portugal, we had similar bottles of a fizzy lemon drink called "pirolito". They were exactly like the ramune bottles, with the glass ball (cap) inside, and in the old days poor kids would break the bottle to play marbles with them (real marbles were expensive toys, go figure). I don't think these are sold anymore, read somewhere the bottle itself has been outlawed for some reason (probably health & safety regulations). Here's what they looked like:
http://olivamos.blogspot.com/2007/11/j-se-falou-aqui-nos-pirolitos-lembrei.html
No idea if there's any connection with ramune, but maybe there are similar bottles all around the world? Maybe other poor kids had the same idea and made inexpensive marbles out of them.
7:14 AM
Tying in with Ramune being a favourite of WWII japanese sailors, I have just learned that the battleship 大和 (Yamato) had an on-board Ramune plant to keep their thirt quenched even far from port. Thank you anime (in this case 神様で中学生 (Kamisama de Chuugakusei) aka かみちゅ!(Kamichu!) ep. 9)
1:45 PM
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