Dec 282011
 

This is probably the most anticipated root beer I’ve ever drank. Ever since I began reviewing root beers in 1998, people would always ask what I thought of Barq’s. It is the main root beer pushed by Coca-Cola and is sold in McDonald’s restaurants, so everyone knows it. The problem though is that I only review glass bottle root beers and I could never find Barq’s in glass. I searched everywhere, throughout Washington State and all up the West Coast. I even scoured the internet, but alas, it was to no avail. I’d always have to shamefully admit that I’d never tried Barq’s, well at least not since I became The Root Beer Gourmet. I still kept up the search over the years, though I had mostly given it up as a lost cause. Then, a few months ago, I tried again. I searched and stumbled across an old discussion board where someone mentioned a market in New Orleans from which Barq’s in glass bottles could be obtained. I pounced. I quickly called the market where they confirmed that they carried Barq’s in glass bottles. I was overjoyed. At long last, it would be mine. “How much to ship it?” I asked. The reply caught me off guard, they wouldn’t ship it. No matter what I offered, the employee then hung up the phone. What? I wasn’t about to be thwarted so easily. But how. My options were few. Fly to New Orleans (I’ve never gone to such extremes for a root beer but maybe), wait until my travels take me to New Orleans (sooner or later I’ll go everywhere), wait until I have a friend go to New Orleans, or find someone there. Then I remembered, wasn’t my Grandmother born in New Orleans? Don’t I have relatives living there? As an aside, this grandmother was of French descent and I had visited France and the region from whence they came. I saw the house that the family lived in for generations and I even met the decedents of the family that stayed in France so this type of family history is rather important to me, it’s my heritage after all. Well that settled it. I was going to close the missing link in the Constantin (the French relatives) heritage of mine and get my Barq’s in the process. I called my dad who directed me to my aunt who put me in contact with my second cousin whom I’d never met, nor even really heard of growing up, named Cynthia. After several wonderfully informative calls about the family over there, she said she would drop by the store and send me a six pack. After what seemed an eternity, but was more like three weeks it finally arrived. One of the bottles was smashed in shipping but the other five were still in pristine condition. They’re pretty sweet looking bottles at that. They’ve got the same vintage style that they did 50 years ago, maybe even older. I bumped it to nearly the front of the root beer queue and finally, after 13 years of searching, was able to try Barq’s. So thank you Cynthia, you’re the greatest cousin anyone could ask for.

The Body is sweet with a very noticeable cola flavor accented by wintergreen, vanilla, and traces of more traditional root beer flavors. It is very different from most root beers I’ve tried. The Bite, for all of the old advertizing “What do you mean Barq’s has bite,” is actually pretty mild. There is a little spice hint and some carbonation tingle. However, the giant caveat with that comes from the fact that the Head is huge but not very frothy. It fizzes down very quickly but before it does it almost escapes the glass. They pack an awful lot of carbonation in it which would give it quite a harsh Bite if it weren’t poured, or at least poured more carefully than I do to evaluate the Head. The Aftertaste is vanilla with a dash of cola.

It is definitely different from the average root beer. I actually like it. It is very cola-ish which I would normally say would merit it a rather low rating for being too far out in the root beer spectrum. But, Barq’s is almost as old as Hires (still searching for that one in glass by the way), and older than classics like A&W and Dad’s, so I can hardly say that they don’t know what root beer should be like. However, it really doesn’t have anything to make it some great spectacular root beer other than the cola flavor, which I’ve already said isn’t normally a good thing. I think that I would certainly enjoy this with a burger and fries and if McDonald’s started serving it in glass bottles, I would drop by and get some (since I’m only a root beer connoisseur, not a burger one). See how it rates against other root beers.




  14 Responses to “Barq’s Famous Olde Tyme Root Beer”

  1. Did this one have sugar or hfcs?

  2. I found a Barq’s glass bottle in a wooded park. I know it is old as they don’t have this in bottles anymore. It says
    Drink
    BARQ’S
    Trade Mark
    It’s good all in the glass not painted on

    It has a 51 on the front bottom and on the back it says DES. PAT.D-98026
    6 12FL. OZS

    IN THE GLASS ON THE BOTTOM IT says

    PROP OF DR PEPPER
    BALL
    BOT CO
    83-121
    6
    LOUISVILLE, KY.

    can you tell me when this was made?

    • I’m not sure when it was made. They still do sell Barq’s in glass bottles and they look exactly like the picture in this post. I would do an image search “Barq’s Antique Bottles” then when you find one that looks exactly like the one you found, you can get a better idea of when it was made. I hope that helps.

    • I was cruising the web and found the Federation of Historic Bottle Collectors http://www.fohbc.org/
      I’d contact them if you still don’t know about your bottle.

  3. Is there a UPC on the bottle? Does it say who it is bottle and/or distributed by?

  4. I have an old bottle with aside top how old is it . It has an barrow on it an A big s in right top corner and wire around the top . Don’t now if the wire is put on later .. around the bottom has your company Around the bottle ….

  5. I wanted to comment on the Barq’s “bite” that they advertise on their cans and in their commercials that used to run on television. The “bite” they are selling is referencing almighty caffeine, yes, that’s right, caffeine in root beer. I would also suspect that Eric the reviewer’s notations of cola in the taste are most likely the caffeine which is traditionally found in cola, hence the correlation. Just some random food for thought! : )

  6. You can also pick up bottles at Parkway Bakery & Tavern in New Orleans. There’s nothing quite like an oyster po’ boy with a cold Barq’s in a bottle 🙂

  7. The original barqs was bottled in 1896 in Biloxi ms. Somewhere around the 70s the rights were sold to coca cola corp. EXCEPT they did not sell glass bottle rights, those remain with the original family. You can find glassbottled barqs only in southern MS and southern LA because it is only bottled in Biloxi still. Some would argue the reason it is so much better in a bottle than anything else is the water supply in biloxi.
    This past summer they put up a historical marker at the site of the original bottling plant ( the creators house where he used bicycle power to create an assembly line

  8. Actually, Coke didn’t take over sole rights to Barq’s until the mid 90s. For instance, Pepsi actually distributed Barq’s in Illinois until 1996. Prior to Coke’s takeover, they used to also sell a brand called “Rainbow Rootbeer,” which was awful.

    I don’t understand how distribution for the glass bottles works. True, I don’t think you can find them outside of the south. But in 1989, my family and I had dinner in a mom and pop restaurant in Quincy, Illinois. Because I was still a kid, the waitress asked if I wanted soda. When she came back, she brought me a Barq’s in a glass bottle. I had never seen this before or since. From what I know today, I have no idea why this joint had this on hand.

    • Interesting. Being from the Northwest, I never saw Barq’s until the mid 90s. When I first saw it, my Dad recognized it, since his mother was from New Orleans and they used to visit there when he was a kid. When I saw it was probably after Coke took over and expanded it more nationally.

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