- Source: Coca wine
Coca wine is an alcoholic beverage combining wine with cocaine. One popular brand was Vin Mariani, developed in 1863 by French-Corsican chemist and entrepreneur Angelo Mariani.
At the end of the 19th century, the fear of drug abuse made coca-based drinks less popular. This led to the prohibition of cocaine in the United States in 1914 via the Harrison Narcotics Tax Act, and the removal of cocaine from coca wine, though coca leaf remained. Coca wine itself became illegal in the United States when its other main drug, alcohol, was banned just a few years later with the Eighteenth Amendment in 1920.
Related beverages
In Atlanta, John Pemberton, a pharmacist, developed a beverage based on Vin Mariani, called Pemberton's French Wine Coca. It proved popular among American consumers. In 1886, when Georgia introduced Prohibition, Pemberton had to replace the wine in his recipe with non-alcoholic syrup. The new recipe became Coca-Cola.
Physiological effects
The combination of cocaine and alcohol leads to the formation of cocaethylene in the body. Studies suggest the compound decreases the feelings of drunkenness from alcohol alone and heightens euphoric sensations, but is also potentially cardiotoxic, more so than either cocaine or alcohol alone.
References
External links
Media related to Cocawine at Wikimedia Commons
University of Buffalo "Before Prohibition: Images from the preprohibition era when many psychotropic substances were legally available in America and Europe" Addiction Research Unit
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Coca-Cola
- Angelo Mariani
- Coke II
- Homunculus
- Kalimotxo
- Daftar perusahaan Amerika Serikat
- Nicki Minaj
- Daftar dukungan kampanye presiden Donald Trump 2024
- Perusahaan Kirin
- Pizza bakso
- Coca wine
- Pemberton's French Wine Coca
- Coca tea
- Vin Mariani
- Coca
- Coca-Cola
- Cola
- Angelo Mariani (chemist)
- Buckfast Tonic Wine
- Coca alkaloid