Where to find la croix




















About this item. Each flavor comes from the natural essence oils of the named fruit with nothing artificial added. LaCroix contains 0 calories, 0 sweeteners, and 0 sodium.

Our sparkling water is vegan, gluten free, non-GMO, and Whole30 approved. Our drinks offer the perfect splash of refreshment for work and play. Enjoy the delicious flavor at the gym, in the office or on the go! FUN: LaCroix is the perfect drink for every occasion. LaCroix Mocktail recipes even provide a splash of fun for your next party or get-together.

Let LaCroix bring fun to your healthy lifestyle. Form: Liquid. State of Readiness: Ready to Drink. Package Quantity: 8. Package type: Multi-Pack Single Servings. Water enhancement type 1: Flavor. Net weight: 96 fl oz US. Beverage container material: Metal. TCIN : UPC : Grocery Disclaimer : Content on this site is for reference purposes only. Target does not represent or warrant that the nutrition, ingredient, allergen and other product information on our Web or Mobile sites are accurate or complete, since this information comes from the product manufacturers.

On occasion, manufacturers may improve or change their product formulas and update their labels. We recommend that you do not rely solely on the information presented on our Web or Mobile sites and that you review the product's label or contact the manufacturer directly if you have specific product concerns or questions.

If you have specific healthcare concerns or questions about the products displayed, please contact your licensed healthcare professional for advice or answers.

Any additional pictures are suggested servings only. Description LaCroix Sparkling Water is the 1 sparkling water brand. LaCroix is a refreshing and healthy beverage that can be enjoyed in any setting. Each sip of LaCroix Sparking Water is flavored with the natural essence oils extracted from the named fruit. It contains 0-calories, 0-sweetenersand 0-sodium. This means you can enjoy the refreshing taste of a carbonated beverage completely guilt-free.

Our water is sourced in the U. The average person needs to drink eight 8-oz glasses of water a day, and with LaCroix Sparkling Water, each of those eight glasses can have a special, fruity essence that you will love!

Enjoy LaCroix! Report incorrect product info. Shipping details Estimated ship dimensions: 5 inches length x 5. Return details This item can be returned to any Target store or Target.

This item must be returned within 90 days of the in-store purchase, ship date or online order pickup. Even during a brief Perrier craze in the late s and early s , sparkling water was a European drink, served in snooty restaurants. Most water Americans drank came out of the tap. The average person drank less than four gallons of bottled water, still and sparkling, per year in Then bottled water began to boom.

By , the average American was drinking 37 gallons of bottled water per year. At the same time, they were losing their taste for sugary soda. Public health crusaders preached about the evils of sugar and yanked vending machines from schools and offices. And, slowly, they made a difference.

In , people in the US drank Bottled water dominates the market, but sparkling water is growing faster. The amount of domestically produced sparkling water Americans consume increased 58 percent between and , according to the International Bottled Water Association. Between and alone, it grew 17 percent.

When Americans decided they wanted fizzy water, National Beverage and its 12 bottling plants were ready. They shipped the product to more stores nationally than ever before, including Whole Foods.

But they had another a secret weapon: flavor. National Beverage created demand for Shasta by constantly creating new flavors, many of them manufactured in house, and retiring old ones. As seltzer sales started to creep up, the company bet that a similar approach could turn sparkling water from a sophisticated but tasteless European drink into an American hit. Their bet was right. Dieters kicking soda and alcohol were among the first LaCroix devotees, happy to find something with a little more flavor.

By , LaCroix was on the approved list for the Whole 30 diet , a restrictive eating plan that, like Paleo, requires participants to give up sugar and alcohol. First came coconut, followed by apricot, mango, and tangerine. Offering 20 flavors gives LaCroix the ability to profit from ubiquity while keeping the cachet of scarcity. The proliferating flavor list also keeps loyal LaCroix drinkers from getting bored. Anjali Prasertong, who wrote about LaCroix for the cooking website the Kitchn , told me she and her husband go to Target and check out new flavors just for fun.

While National Beverage doesn't break out sales figures for individual brands, together LaCroix, Everfresh juices, and Rip It energy drinks grew 35 percent year over year in winter , according to a recent financial disclosure with the Securities and Exchange Commission. And that's in the winter. Given that LaCroix is really a summer drink, the biggest sales gains may be yet to come.

Its year-old founder, Nick Caporella , is now a late-in-life billionaire. And he's not done yet. Caporella promised shareholders that will be the company's "break-out year":. Each and every month, momentum is fueled through magnifying distribution, controlled launching of theme extensions, healthier beverages and the luring into our fold. Bronner's soap, that's a fairly lucid sentence.

But behind the eccentric, press-shy founder is a nimble marketing machine. The brand sponsored Susan G. Komen for the Cure walks to fight breast cancer and paid the authors of fitness-oriented motherhood blogs to write posts proclaiming their love for LaCroix. They offered Tory Burch bags as a giveaway. Being approved by the Whole 30 program, whose dieters are encouraged to share their meals on social media, nudged more cans of LaCroix into Instagram feeds.

But it was another group of LaCroix drinkers, ones the company doesn't seem to have courted at all, who gave it prime cultural real estate. The forces that shape our cultural references, deciding what will be a shorthand for trendiness on blogs and painstakingly documented in the New York Times style section, can seem mysterious. But the answer is stupidly obvious: If you want to be written about, win over a bunch of writers. Joe Mande, a writer on Parks and Rec, promoted LaCroix so relentlessly in and that he begged the brand to make him their official spokesperson.

LaCroix not only declined but issued a cease-and-desist letter. If you want to be written about, win over a bunch of writers. Sparkling water "was like a HUGE part of my job at every place I've ever worked at," Ryan Rosenberg, who worked as an assistant in TV writers' rooms in the early s, told me over email.

Rosenberg could detail the specific water preferences of every group of writers where he worked. Most drank bottled Perrier, an annoying task because the bottles were heavy and because when supplies ran low, assistants were expected to drop everything to order more.

That was a decisive moment. From then on, "we ordered LaCroix from OfficeMax and it saved my life," said Rosenberg, now a performer and writer for the comedy troupe Upright Citizens Brigade. I like to imagine that once LaCroix was easily available, some starry-eyed Midwestern transplants working low-level jobs jumped at the chance to stock a taste of home. But it's possible that, like Rosenberg, they were just grateful to stop lugging around heavy boxes of Perrier bottles. It has a horrible taste.

Be cautious if you have never had it before. Helpful Not helpful Report review. Soap indeed 1 out of 5 stars. Anonymous - 1 month ago , Verified purchaser. Okay, I was really excited about this because I looove coconut and coconut water is awesome! Also, the grapefruit flavor it was really good even though I hate grapefruit , guava flavor, and passionfruit flavor were all pretty good, so I thought this one would be good too.

However, there were some negative reviews mixed in with the tons of positive ones, so I was kind of hesitant. In the end, I decided to get it. When I opened the can, a lovely scent of coconut came out, but when I drank it It had this weird sour taste and wanted to get rid of it immediately, but that would be a waste of my money, right?

So, I had the crazy idea of using it for Since the smell was great, it would be a great way to use it up, right? Yeah, no. The coconut scent spreading in my room gave me bad headaches, but that's kind of my fault for going crazy at that moment. Well, now, I have the remaining seven cans sitting in their boxes.

Waste of money. If you're planning on buying this, please consider other flavors unless you want to end up with me. I don't see how anybody could use this thing in their lives. End of the story. Did you? Refreshing 5 out of 5 stars. Km - 1 month ago , Verified purchaser. This flavor is great. I hope it is not seasonal. So good! Tperla - 2 months ago , Verified purchaser.

This is the best sparkling water flavor there is! NoMore45 - 2 months ago. Excellent coconut taste. Also mixes well with rum for a homemade hard seltzer. Gross 1 out of 5 stars. Not a good flavor. You must try! This sparking water is by far my favorite. It has a very freshing taste and hydrates your thirst. Best flavor 5 out of 5 stars. VeeRich - 9 months ago , Verified purchaser. Coconut is by far my favorite flavor of Lacroix! The flavor is very subtle but delicious. The water is refreshing and crisp.

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