
In fact, this issue has been thought about before for the food doctrine, but every day so many things happen, some things think about it is also a flash.
It was that lazy afternoon in Perth when three people were sitting in a daze in a coffee shop by the river, a student suddenly asked why coke in an aluminum can is always better than coke in other packages.
Then began a professional speculation from wulitou to academia.
Afternoons are the best time to do research on these things.
There is an obvious comparison between plastic bottles and aluminum cans.
But here's the thing. If it's a fresh plastic bottle, it's not that different from a soda can.
If you drink differently, you're either a high-end "drinker" or a highly suggestive person.
The typical plastic bottle in a supermarket has been around for a while, so it should taste worse than aluminum.
This is because when both packets of soda are injected with the same amount of CARBON dioxide, the plastic "penetrates" more easily than the aluminium.
The carbon dioxide still escapes from the sealed bottle through some physical and chemical reaction.
If you leave a plastic bottle of soda in direct sunlight for 12 weeks, it can leak out 15 percent of the carbon dioxide.
What about the glass bottle?
When the carnivore looks for answers to glass bottles, it sees a string of "childhood memories".
Many people, including myself, love glass bottles because they remember the coolness of a 50-cent bottle as a child, the time when they shouted "Madame, return the bottle", the pleasure of sticking a straw in and watching it half float up, plus the inexplicable belief that "glass bottles are better for some reason".
So, in theory, the three flavors of soda should be aluminum cans & GT;
Glass & gt;
Plastic bottles.
But as for personal preference, I'm waiting for you to tell me which one is best to drink