There are some who claim that Fanta, a popular soft drink produced and distributed by the Coca-Cola company, was actually invented by Nazis during the Third Reich. Others go so far as the say that Coca-Cola produced this product themselves to sell in Nazi Germany when they feared the backlash that might come if they marketed Coca-Cola to both Allied and Axis powers at the same time. Is there any truth to these accusations?
Coca-Cola was a tremendously popular beverage in post-war Germany. Germany was its most successful market and many people, including the Nazi's enjoyed it. That did not end with the beginning of World War II, although the Coca-Cola company in Germany found it increasingly difficult to procure the necessary ingredients to make the beverage. When the American born director of the German Coca-Cola company died in 1938, the German born Max Keith took over. Max Keith is the man who invented Fanta.
The war had essentially isolated the German branch of the Coca-Cola company from Atlanta and from the rest of the world. Thus, the only way that Keith could communicate with the company's headquarters was through Coca-Cola's Swiss company. Although this connection through a neutral country allowed some limited communication with the company's headquarters, Keith could not use it to obtain the necessary ingredients for making the popular beverage. He had to come up with something else.
What he came up with is what we now call Fanta. It is called that because when telling his employees to let their imaginations ("fantasies" in German) run wild, someone offered that "fanta" itself would be a good name.
The beverage was originally made with what limited ingredients Keith had at his disposal. For example, he used whey, a by product of making cheese, and apple fiber, a by product of making cider. He also used a sugar substitute and whatever fruits he could obtain. The necessity of having to use different fruits as necessary