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The best fruit pairings for the Welch's Sparkling juices according to AI (Copilot)

Pink Jazz

Well-Known Member
I asked Copilot what the best fruit pairings for the three major Welch's Sparkling juices would be, here are the responses it gave me.

For the Red, it gave me these pairings:
  • Strawberries
  • Raspberries
  • Blackberries
  • Apples
  • Pears

For the White, it gave me these pairings:
  • Green Apple
  • Pineapple
  • Peaches
  • Kiwi
  • Lemon or Lime slices

And for the Rosé, it gave me these pairings:
  • Strawberries
  • Raspberries
  • Peaches
  • Watermelon
  • Grapes
  • Pineapple

Do you agree with any of these fruit pairings?

For me, the best fruit matches are Blackberries for the Red, Lemon for the White, and Strawberries for the Rosé. What do you think?

I can understand a few of the pairings but a few others are surprising. For example, for the Rosé I expected Strawberries and Peaches to be likely responses, but Watermelon and Pineapple are a bit more unusual.
 
Copilot has no pathological sense of taste.

It can only comment and apply various existing metrics involving tastes from other subjective human palates under laboratory conditions and random sampling as well as correlate them to marketing results. Especially focused on a particular brand name.

And in the absence of truly understanding what metrics Copilot uses, why would one want to blindly contemplate the results?
 
Copilot has no pathological sense of taste.

It can only comment and apply various existing metrics involving tastes from other subjective human palates under laboratory conditions and random sampling as well as correlate them to marketing results. Especially focused on a particular brand name.

And in the absence of truly understanding what metrics Copilot uses, why would one want to blindly contemplate the results?

As a rule though, Copilot specifically will always give you links to the places where it found any data that it used in giving a response.

If it's giving a list like the one in the OP, it will always also show you where that info came from. Usually it will give 2 or 3 (or 4 or 5 sometimes) separate links to stuff. So you can double-check things and whatnot.

That's why it's the one to ask for stuff like this.
 
As a rule though, Copilot specifically will always give you links to the places where it found any data that it used in giving a response.

If it's giving a list like the one in the OP, it will always also show you where that info came from. Usually it will give 2 or 3 (or 4 or 5 sometimes) separate links to stuff. So you can double-check things and whatnot.

That's why it's the one to ask for stuff like this.

But the data it relies on is still one of human subjective taste in the literal sense. Not what I'd consider to be conclusive other than perhaps what one product may quantitatively sell better than others.
 
But the data it relies on is still one of human subjective taste in the literal sense. Not what I'd consider to be conclusive other than perhaps what one product may quantitatively sell better than others.
I just think some pairings are more predictable than others (for example for the Rosé, strawberries vs. pineapple). If there are some more unusual pairings you can think of that might taste good that are not on these lists, let me know.
 
I just think some pairings are more predictable than others (for example for the Rosé, strawberries vs. pineapple). If there are some more unusual pairings you can think of that might taste good that are not on these lists, let me know.

I'd think that would inevitably require market research. If the data doesn't already exist, how would Copilot be able to come to such a qualitative conclusion over untested pairings that don't necessarily exist yet ?
 
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