I actually have a guest review to put up this time from the quite lovely Kite, and decided that keeping with the theme, I’d put up a review of two “premium”/natural energy drinks. Ain’t the usual thoroughfare of bouncing off the walls on entirely too much caffeine, but still deserving of a place.

First up, Kite with Go Girl Glo:

Someone gave me a can of Go-Girl Glo.  This drink claims to ‘promote healthy skin’ somehow, as well as having less caffeine andcalories than most other energy drinks.  Since I am not currently falling asleep at my desk, I figure this could be a good thing.  Whether or not it -is- a good thing has yet to be seen.  The can is turquoise and silver, with GO GIRL emblazoned across the center with GLO down below in somewhat difficult-to-read letters.  At first I assumed the drink was called Go Girl, but no, that’s the brand.

The flavor, according to the side of the can, is “derived from a refreshing combination of pomegranate and star fruit.”  Now, star fruit tastes pretty weird, but I’m something of a fan of pomegranate.  Hopefully the lower calories doesn’t mean artificial sweeteners.  Let’s look at the ingredient list.

Wow, that’s hard to read.  White on silver.

Liquid sucrose.  That’s not so bad.

Wait, what?  “Super Citrimax”?  Trademarked?  Can they seriously do that?

Ah well, let’s see how this thing tastes.

The strange concoction smells sweet, with an unknown sort of fruity flavor.  Probably the star fruit.  It doesn’t smell cloyingly sweet, so with luck it won’t coat my tongue.  Time to take the dive.

Not bad.  The fruit is a fairly light flavor, and the sweetness isn’t too –wait, no, I take it back.  The aftertaste is a lingering sweetness that more or less overwhelms anything else after a few seconds.  Not as tasty as I had hoped.  Where’s all that sweet coming from?  I hope it’s not ‘Super Citrimax’ considering I have no idea what comprises that.

Oh look, turning the can around I see that it’s a mild herbal appetite suppressant.  This does not sound nice considering I’m drinking it with my lunch.  Oops.  I suppose since it’s marketed to women, it has to have -something- to cater to the stereotypical self-image issues of the female gender.  I hate marketing.

Overall I’d say this thing gets a 3 out of 5.  The taste isn’t bad – if a bit too sweet for my particular taste buds, especially the aftertaste.  I do wish it had a bit more pomegranate flavor in there.  If you’re looking for something that doesn’t give you jitters followed by a hard crash though, the lower caffeine content (only 75mg) is a nice change.  I could do without the appetite suppressant, but how can you go wrong with something that’s supposed to help make your skin healthier?

And now, my turn with an old favourite, Purdey’s.

I’ve loved Purdey’s I was a little kid. I remember there being a gold bottle variety too, but I haven’t seen it in a long time. Either way, this drink claims “to help towards your well-being and provide a healthy and immediate way to feel refreshed at any time.”

So does it? In my experience, short answer yes. Long answer: Yeeeeeeeeeeeee-

Though really, it’s a good drink, though expensive. UK readers may find it on a BOGOF (buy one get one free) offer at their local Holland & Barratt. The bottle is an imposing silver thing that looks almost futuristic, or like something you’d expect to find at a Pret A Manger. The bottle is glass, so has a pretty nice weight to it, if a little oversized in my tiny hands.

The smell is pretty unique to Purdey’s. I’ve never encountered another drink that smells (or tastes) quite like it. The smell is very bitter, almost like a sour apple. Which is natural, I guess, since it contains B vitamins and apple juice. For the more sensitive noses, ginseng is also a pretty prominent scent too. And really, aside some grape juice and other vitamins, there’s not much more to it. A simple concoction without a mile-long ingredient list. I approve.

The taste? It’s good! A fruit flavour that may well be the original “energy drink” tang, but not nearly as sugary. The bitterness of the B vitamins somehow complement the flavour, and it turns into a particularly refreshing, pleasant drink. I’ve loved Purdey’s since I was little, so it’s hard to explain much more. But it could well be the one “original” energy drink in my eyes. UK readers, do try and nab yourselves a bottle of what I would refer to as a quintessential British drink.

Last up, the one I’ve probably mentioned to everybody and the kitchen sink; Pussy.

I confess, it was curiosity and a bargain price at the Yeovilton Air Day that made me review this. I’ve heard of it, and every time I look at the can I want to snort loudly like a schoolkid. Particularly the blurb where it states the name “creates talkability”. No, it creates a bunch of students going up to everybody and asking for Pussy/offering Pussy. This is more disastrous than the Wii. Mostly because it’s more internationally humourous.

The can is nice. It’s minimalistic, and has a crest that…I don’t know, is supposed to inspire thoughts of frat houses? Given its name, I’d wager it was designed in frat house. At the bottom, in a nice cursive font is “100% Natural Ingredients”, and I wonder, just for a moment, how artificial it will taste. Time to crack it open.

It smells just like passionfruit. Which is bizarre, since it claims to be lychee flavoured, and you know what was definitely lychee flavoured? NeuroSport. Regardless, there’s really no other flavour in there. No bitterness, no ginseng smell, nothing.

Wait, hold on. *looks at blurb, looks at ingredients list* There’s no lychee juice here, and since it’s natural, no flavourings to make it like that! How can it be lychee when it contains none? You can’t just…magic flavour out of grape and lime juice! How does it even smell of passionfruit?! asfhljkewhrwgjwgnkweghgh-

Okay, okay, I’m tasting. I’m drinking my can of Pussy juic-*snrk*

This…this isn’t lychee. I’m honestly disappointed. I’m not even sure what the hell it tastes like. The passionfruit flavour is there, but now it’s smothered with…apparently white grape? And the ‘botanical extracts’ part, which amount to *breath* Guruana, Siberian Ginseng, Milk Thistle, Gingko Biloba, Schizandra and Sarsaparilla. No wonder it’s so confused about what to taste like. I still don’t know where the passionfruit flavour comes from. ¯\(°_0)/¯

I really don’t know what to make of this. It’s not an atrocity, it’s just…I don’t….my brain hurts. I’m gonna go lay down for a bit.

Seriously, what the hell.

So in an endeavor to create pancakes that followed the low carb diet that reigns in this family, coconut flour pancakes were created, using eggs, milk, butter, sugar, salt, baking powder and coconut flour in place of the normal wheat flour.

The first pancake created was like eating watery, weak scrambled eggs with coconut added, and the texture left a whole lot to be desired. So more coconut was added, same result. The pancakes also liked to burn in record time, and were pretty impossible to flip. Realising this was probably due to the coconut flour not combining with the liquids very well, hemp flour was added.

As much as I’d like hemp flour to just be ground up hemp buds and leaves, it unfortunately isn’t, nor will it get you high. However, it seemed to impart the desired texture, and the new mix went on the pan. The result was sadly similar, and with more solids added, it began to stop cooking in the middle, leaving an unpleasant, uncooked gooey centre. I mean that in a bad way. Not like brownies which are amazing.

Losing patience fast, I decided to add spelt flour, which is as close to normal flour as I’ll ever see in this family, short of going on a pie binge.

The result was…..even less than ideal. Greasy, burnt on the outside and entirely raw in the centre, the Frankenstein monster I called “pancake” was nearly inedible for its taste and texture.

I guess this goes to show, that even though I’m a good cook, low-carb food is f***ing confusing and awful.

I’ve actually been curious about this range of products from Neurobrands for a while. With their distinctly lava-lamp like bottles that could also be construed as perverse in more childish minds, and rather amusing branding, -particularly the “NeuroGasm” variety that I was sadly unable to obtain on my trip- I jumped at the chance when I saw them offer at my local Waitrose, along with a few other unusual and curious energy drinks that I’ll probably save for a rainy day. I have many, many other things to write about, now that I’m home.

Regardless, starting with the NeuroSport bottle -which I feel the urge to note is non-carbonated-, I feel vaguely comforted by the bold print of “NO ARTIFICIAL COLOURS & FLAVOURS”…then heartbroken, because it’s sweetened with sucralose. However, in the last few months I seem to have grown a palate for that flavour, and my favourite energy drink Monster Lo-Carb is actually sweetened mostly with the substance. However, unlike Monster, this contains “Sodium, Potassium, Calcium, Zinc, Phosphorous, Magnesium, Selenium, Manganese, Copper, Chromium, Molybdenum and Chloride”…Sounds like an interesting combination suitable for restoring lost minerals and salt from being ill, or as it suggests, working out. Underneath the impressive mineral list is their slogan, in bold white letters; “DRINK SMART, DRINK NEURO“, and I could swear it’s a slogan I’ve seen on so many other drinks.

Cracking it open, I’m a little disappointed in the cap, which reveals a standard 500ml bottle opening, just like the average bottle of Coke or Dr. Pepper. Which is a shame, really, since I thought it would open in a fashion similar to the older Evian water bottles, which were honestly cryptic in their opening method, as a child.

So the smell? Lychees. I love lychees, so this is a huge plus point to me. If you don’t know how lychees smell, then it’s hard to describe. Imagine a very, very sweet variety of melon. No, sweeter than that. Regardless, the smell alone is making my mouth water with good memories of making bubble tea with lychee juice in place of the actual tea part.

How does it taste? Goddamn awesome. While the undeniable bitter tang of sucralose is there, it’s surprisingly well masked by the blissfully mild flavour of, yes, lychees! Somewhat thankfully, the flavour isn’t nearly as strong as actual lychee juice, which is a drink that I strictly reserve for sipping. Those of you who know me in person will know how crazily fast I can chug down drinks when I’m thirsty.

This means that NeuroSport gets a big thumbs up for being massively tasty, only 37 calories per bottle!!!!1!one if that’s your schtick in diets, and being a pretty good option for restoring minerals in the event of illness (or getting sunstroke like I did last weekend). This is pretty monumental, given my past experiences with anything not produced by Monster.

But hear ye! There is still yet one more Neurobrand product to drink today!

NeuroBliss, which claims to be a “mood enhancement” drink, and unlike the Sport variety is lightly carbonated. Which means after transit and being unceremoniously tossed in the fridge, it’s going to explode its milky white contents all over me just like-

I jest, I jest. So! NeuroBliss, containing “Acetyl-L-Carnitine, Gingko biloba, Chamomile and Siberian ginseng” looks like….a pretty odd line-up, honestly. Chamomile is a “downer” and ginseng an “upper”, which is a cause for a raised eyebrow, since I’ve always avoided mixing the two. Which is why you’ll rarely, if ever, see me mix alcohol with energy drinks, no matter how damn popular it is. But alas, I must continue for the sake of science..and morbid curiosity. More the latter than the former, to be honest.

The smell is what I’d call interesting. Not in a sarcastic “oh lol u mean its horrible” way, but I mean seriously, it’s interesting. On a first sniff, it smells just like run-of-the-mill tangy, cloudy lemonade. Nothing out of the ordinary. Take a long sniff and the smell changes distinctly. I’m honestly finding it hard to describe what exactly, this monstrosity has turned into. It’s a smell that I recall from my childhood, the smell of L’Oreal’s kiddie shampoo, the smell of bad, artificial marzipan flavouring and the inevitable acidic tinge of cyanide that follows along with it. Also, this one glue I used to use as a kid with fumes that would get you high from 10 foot away and smelled like marzipan. And used cyanide to glue things.

Suddenly, I’m not so keen on even putting my lips near this. But I do. Because I’m putting common sense behind me and letting stupid take the reigns just for you! Isn’t that nice?

Ow. I’m not sure how, but the bubbles from its light carbonation are like spontaneously getting pins and needles in my mouth and over everything it touches. The taste? The taste is…it’s um…It’s interesting. Yes, it tastes similarly to its smell, with the cloying, sickly edge of sucralose that is more prominent in this than the prior drink. I suppose if it tastes like it smells, then it tastes of soap, marzipan and death. Which….is pretty accurate actually. At the same time, for the more artificial sweetener-hardened among you, it may even taste pleasant. If you like soap, almonds and death. And pins and needles.

For something that sounded so pleasant on the bottle, and with NeuroSport’s vampire-sparkling review, I feel a little bad about this so lowly. It gets nicer the more you go through the bottle, but still pretty grim, all things considered. Maybe the alledged ‘mood enhancement’ the bottle boasts will take effect and I’ll stop caring that I feel like I just swallowed a mixture of L’Oreal kids shampoo, marzipan, pear drops and cyanide.

Wait, this review got to just about 1000 words? Damn.

I guess I’ll write more interesting things later.