Ingrid volunteered to go first as I hid behind a wall of pillows, so as I wouldn’t be in the range of red mucus. She chose the slide Pop Rocks into mouth followed by a sip of coke method. Her face started to swell with foam among the faint crackle of the Pop Rocks. Ingrid’s test had failed explosion and/or nostril projectiles. It was now my turn.
Since I hadn’t had Pop Rocks in about ten years I wasn’t ready to “Taste the Explosion” just yet. I prepared myself with a few sips of Coca-Cola and blew my nose just to be safe. I chose the method Ingrid had, sliding the candy first with a shower of Coke. My mouth started to puff up with foam as the mixture became harder to swallow. This uncomfortable reaction only lasted ten solid seconds and for what? Nothing! Our brains didn’t eject from our skulls and splatter against the ceiling, NO! Not a single foamy booger emerged. Err! Combining Coca-Cola & Pop Rocks to blast a persons head off their neck was nothing more than a hoax!
Pop Rocks will forever be the founder of “explosive” candy, paving the way for other popping edibles and if I were just reviewing Pop Rocks alone, I would reward them a solid four; though this review revolves mostly around the Coca-Cola & Pop Rocks Mixture myth. Let it be known through out the land that the myth of Coke and Pop Rocks do not make ones head burst into flames. This combination only acts as a great substitute for Alka-Seltzer and it only receives a one out of a possible four because it still fascinates Ingrid’s little brother and sister.
P.S. Does anyone remember a powdered sugar candy that came in a cartoonish looking bomb? It had a string for the fuse that would be for pulling open the bomb to reveal the powder inside. Comment if you know. Thanks!
-eep!
Comments
8