Julmust
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Julmust (Swedish jul "Christmas" or "yule" and must "must") is a soft drink that is consumed mainly in Sweden around Christmas. During the rest of the year it is usually hard to find in stores, but sometimes it's sold under the "de-Christmasified" name must . At Easter the name is påskmust (påsk "Easter"). Only recently has Sommarmust (sommar, "summer") been available in stores. The content is the same regardless of the marketing name although the time it is stored before bottling differs; however, the beverage is more closely associated with Christmas, somewhat less with Easter and traditionally not at all with the summer. 45 million litres of julmust are consumed during December (to be compared with roughly 9 million Swedes), which is around 50% of the total softdrink volume in December and 3/4s of the total yearly must sales.[1]
Must was created by Harry Roberts and his father Robert Roberts in 1910 as a non-alcoholic alternative to beer. The syrup is still made exclusively by Roberts AB in Örebro. The original recipe is said to be locked up in a safe with only one person knowing the full recipe.
Must is made of carbonated water, sugar, hops extract, malt extract, spices, colouring (E150), citric acid, and preservatives. The hops and malt extracts give the must a somewhat beer-like taste, but must is not fermented and contains no alcohol. Must can be aged provided it is stored in a glass bottle. Some people buy must in December only to store it a year before drinking it.
In Sweden, Julmust outsells Coca-Cola during the Christmas season[2]; in fact, the consumption of Coca-Cola drops as much as 50% over Christmas[1]. This was quoted as one of the main reasons Coca-Cola broke away from their contract with Pripps and started Coca-Cola Drycker Sverige AB instead.[1] Coca-Cola now produces its own julmust, albeit very anonymous and never advertised until 2004, when Coca-Cola started marketing their julmust under the brand "Bjäre julmust", but they buy the syrup from Roberts AB[3].
Those outside Sweden who are curious to try Julmust might be able to purchase and sample a bottle from a nearby IKEA.[4] However, availability is not guaranteed; one is most likely to find it in stock early in the month of December. Kristall Beverage Inc. in Massachusetts, USA bottles Julmust for sale in the USA.[5]
In November of 2004 Pepsi marketed a product similar in idea and somewhat in taste to Julmust to the United States called Pepsi Holiday Spice. It was only on sale during the 2004-2005 holiday season.