• thelazywriter
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    371 year ago

    Learned a new term today: “sober curious.” I quit drinking 5 years ago, and never looked back. I wouldn’t mind some more variety for non-alcoholic drinks, especially those without sugar. Can’t have pop too often because it’s just sugar. Kombucha reminds me of beer so I avoid it. Fruit juices are full of sugar too. So it’s usually down to tea, coffee or water for me.

    • @[email protected]
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      281 year ago

      lol that sounds like vocabulary only an alcoholic would invent.

      “I’ve heard of being sober, but I’m to afraid to try it right now.”

      • @[email protected]
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        41 year ago

        It’s a super weird turn of phrase. I admit, as someone who doesn’t actually enjoy the flavour of alcohol nor its intoxicating effects, I’d not mind having something a little more universal that I can say to people. “I don’t really drink” both comes with a lot of unrelated baggage – they think I’m either a recovering alcoholic or a church nut – and people get really weird about it if they ever see me having a drink (probably because they think I’ve fallen off the wagon or something).

        But that phrase sure as hell isn’t going to be “sober-curious”.

        • @ttmrichter
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          21 year ago

          How 'bout the phrase “what concern is it of yours what I do and do not drink?”

          A: Want some booze?

          B: Nah, I’m good.

          A: OK.

          That’s the mature conversation. Since most people aren’t like A in this conversation, however, I tend to actually experience:

          C: Want some booze?

          D: Nah, I’m good. [N.B. this presupposes I don’t want some booze: I’m not a teetotaller, but I’m not always in the mood for booze]

          C: Why not?

          D: In what way does your knowing the reasons make this anything beyond an increasingly awkward conversation?

          C: Asshole!

          D: Whatever.

    • @[email protected]
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      121 year ago

      Since things like iced coffee and unsweetened tea exists, I don’t really have a problem with options, especially since they’ve both become common enough to be canned.

      That said, the term “sober curious” just sounds degrading, like you’re saying “that weirdo guy who’s actually wondering what it’s like to be sober” rather than someone who doesn’t want to be a publicly acceptable drug addict.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        “Look, I’m totally a drinker, but I’ve always wanted to try not-drinking, and I was wondering if maybe you’d like to be my first time?”

      • thelazywriter
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        51 year ago

        Once you try avoiding sugar, your choices are pretty limited. I drank some pop when I was just starting to quit, but I knew it was just a temporary solution. On the bright side, you save money by drinking water most of the time. If we go out I’ll sometimes order those fake cocktails, but they are so expensive.

      • @[email protected]
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        41 year ago

        Not the person you’re replying to but I’ve been sober almost 7 years and I drink tons of flavored sparkling water.

      • thelazywriter
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        21 year ago

        I drank a ton of those 0 sugar flavored carbonated water when I was quitting, but I stopped after a while. Felt bad creating so much recycling. But yeah, I like them! I’ll take one when people offer or when I do feel like something other than water. I just no longer buy them on a regular basis. My home made alternative is squeezing half a lemon in a glass of water or club soda (and I’d buy the 2L bottles).

        • @[email protected]
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          61 year ago

          I bought a soda stream and will cycle through various things to flavor it. My two go-tos are orange juice and mango juice. And I usually just put a splash of it on top. Maybe 1/10.

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            I got a SodaStream and love it. I feel better about no throwing away as much plastic every time I want a drink. I love water but sometimes I need some variety and it fills that gap quite well.

    • @[email protected]
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      -71 year ago

      As long as there’s no added sugar, the fruit juices should be fine. Not all sugars are equal, and fructose is a long chain sugar so it’s more like a fuse then the dynamite (glucose).

  • @[email protected]
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    331 year ago

    I was trying to escape beer to save money, but at $2 a can non-alcoholic is even more expensive despite seemingly less taxes needing to be paid.

    • @[email protected]
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      51 year ago

      Is non-alcoholic beer reallly more expensive than the regular? In Europe they’re on par in most places. In Northern Europe (Norway, Denmark) it’s even significantly cheaper due to taxes.

      • @SpaceNoodle
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        -11 year ago

        Yes, it tends to be pricier. It’s not addictive, so they need bigger margins that they can’t make up in volume.

          • @Nouveau_Burnswick
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            11 year ago

            The process? Distillation method, sure. Limited fermentation, fermentation free, and dilution are quite similar to their alcoholised counterparts.

            The ingredient/supply costs for non-alcoholic beer is more expensive; which is mostly a volume thing, but their is a portion of that related to precision required for a near-beer not required for a normal beer.

    • @cheese_greater
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      31 year ago

      You ever tried kombucha, it may hit the spot similarly.

    • OtterOPM
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      1 year ago

      My initial assumption was that it’s because it’s newer, so they need to make up that r&d cost (edit: I get why this is silly now). Once there is a lot more competition for it, the prices should come down. Similar to how some plant based meats / milks or gluten-free products became more accessible once general people started buying them instead of a tiny group that could be exploited more easily.

      I’m just hoping for fewer drunk driving accidents and reduced health issues

        • @doublejay1999
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          121 year ago

          Let us not forget, 1 trillion types of non alcoholic drinks already exist.

          People don’t event know when they a being marketed.

            • @ttmrichter
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              11 year ago
              • Water
              • Tea (and just the camellia sinensis part of this is already a bewildering variety of flavour, aroma, and mouthfeel profiles!)
              • Coffee (almost as much variety in flavour, aroma, and mouthfeels)
              • Tisanes (a.k.a. “herbal tea”, and since practically any dried herb or flower can be made into a tisane for infusion, the variety here is absolutely off the charts!)
              • Rooibus

              Like seriously, dude. If you think you’ve had even a tiny fraction of traditional non-alcoholic drinks you’ve been had. *

        • OtterOPM
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          21 year ago

          fair, again I’m just hopeful that this will become a good option for people

      • meseek #2982
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        1 year ago

        R&D cost lol, there’s no such thing. That’s what companies want you to believe so they can upsell medicine and technology.

        This is just another market rife for capitalism to ensnare. Some guy crunched the numbers and found that x% don’t drink at events. So to recoup that lost revenue, they made this. The drinks, the ads, the news articles that cover it. All planted to drive up their bottom line.

        Because that’s how businesses work. They find an angle and swoop in and start setting up payment systems to see what people will begrudgingly pay for.

        • OtterOPM
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          1 year ago

          I was equating them, probably incorrectly, to things like plant based meat companies that did have to consider margins till they could scale up.

          But yes I guess a major conglomerate doesn’t have that constraint, and it’s probably not that hard to make something that tastes like X beer without alcohol

      • @ttmrichter
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        31 year ago

        Non-alcoholic beer is older than most of the people in this thread commenting¹. There’s no more “R&D cost” involved in making it. If they’re charging more for the non-alcoholic than the alcoholic, it’s just straight-up greed.


        ¹ Source: I was drinking this shit when I was 12—45 years ago, in other words—and even then it was old news!

  • @[email protected]
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    111 year ago

    How does this compare with recent trends of non alcoholic drinks coming out with alcoholic versions of their flagships? I’ve seen Mountain Dew and Arizona Tea drinks with alcohol in them at the ABC, which is really strange to me.

  • @[email protected]
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    111 year ago

    I wonder if this is a pendulum swinging, and gen z’s kids will drink to excess.

    Me I limit myself to one or two drinks, only in social spaces/never alone.

    • OtterOPM
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      1 year ago

      That’s interesting, I hadn’t thought of that. I guess we’re seeing a bit of that with smoking vs vaping, but I’d need to look at the rates more to see if that actually was like a pendulum

    • @systemglitch
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      1 year ago

      I’m gen x and have no issue drinking 6 beer alone (alone as the only one drinking in the home) once or twice a month, while I do my own thing or interact with the family.

  • @ttmrichter
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    91 year ago

    Didn’t Gen Z already destroy hard liquor as an industry if breathless headlines of a decade or so ago are anything to go by?

    • @[email protected]
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      71 year ago

      Has a large proportion of Gen Zers quit drinking entirely? If so, then along with social media facilitating cathartic sharing, and wage stagnation destroying lifestyle expectations, that would add another layer helping to explain the apparently larger percentage of Gen Zers than with previous generations that are (publicly) having trouble putting up with certain kinds of BS at the workplace.

      • @ttmrichter
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        31 year ago

        Maybe it was the Millenials who were being blamed then? I lose track of which divide the press is trying to drive a wedge in this week.

          • @ttmrichter
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            11 year ago

            I know! You poor bastards! You’ve destroyed everything!

  • @bl4ckblooc
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    21 year ago

    I honestly don’t understand this trend. It seems like craft sofas but more expensive

    • @[email protected]
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      161 year ago

      I like coffee, tea, beer, wine. They’re all pretty bitter. Non-alcoholic substitutes like soda and juice are typically sweet. That’s the appeal for me, having a bitter non-alcoholic drink, like a ‘near beer’. I’m not strongly into this trend, but I understand an angle to it when I try to cut back my beer consumption

      • @bl4ckblooc
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        41 year ago

        Most of the products hitting the shelf are non alcoholic RTD though, not beer or wine. Some vodka seltzer brands are even coming out with their own brand of seltzer and it’s going to cost about the same as the vodka version.

        If the companies making these drinks had the pricing in line with other nonalcoholic drinks it would make more sense, but the prices are the same if not higher than actual alcohol.

    • @[email protected]
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      141 year ago

      Dude my bespoke couch is the bomb and the handmade futon? Pure. Luxury. Craft sofas are life changing.

    • @garbagebagel
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      11 year ago

      The price is kind of wild but my partner who is a ‘functional’ alcoholic stopped drinking in January of this year and has switched to non-alcoholic beers. There’s some that are pretty wildly expensive but a lot are actually still a lot cheaper than regular beer. It’s a good outlet for those who mostly drink out of habit.

  • @Sarmyth
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    11 year ago

    I noticed a huge influx of these this past year. I was a grocer actually stocking the product a couple of years ago, so I know this is somewhat recent. It was really good timing for my wife, though, while she was pregnant this year.

    The prices on the non alcoholic craft cocktails in a can though… yeesh.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    Personally I had all the sobriety I could stand by the time I had my first drink. I will sober up when I die like I will catch up on my sleep. Edit: It appears that me living my life the way I want is not loved by all.

    • @[email protected]
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      71 year ago

      People aren’t downvoting you because they disagree with your lifestyle, but your comment is like going into a thread about veganism and saying “fuck yall I’m gonna eat a cheese burger every day until I die”. A valid personal decision, but not really relavent to the conversation unless you just wanted everyone to know you’re different

      • @[email protected]
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        -21 year ago

        Thanks for explaining this. Also apparently I am different and I don’t really care whether people know or not.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          I don’t really care whether people know or not.

          Going out of your way to make a comment about it is an interesting choice then lol

          • @ttmrichter
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            21 year ago

            I know, right? “I don’t really care if people know I’m different or not so I’m going to post loudly and proudly how different I am and then whine that people are downvoting me for not being able to read a room and understand concepts like ‘appropriate spaces’ and such.”

            Because posting your difference shows not caring. And whining when people express distaste is not caring.