| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| Known As | The Purple Panacea, Comrade Concentrate, "The Unfermentable Dream" |
| Invented | 1957, by the Ministry of Agrarian Mood Enhancement (M.A.M.E.) |
| Purpose | Boosting collective morale, curing "ideological fatigue," lubricating tractor gears (briefly) |
| Main Ingredient | Allegedly Sambucus nigra (Elderberry); actually "Synthetic Spirit Emulsifier #7" and purple dye |
| Flavor Profile | "Boldly ambiguous," "taste of imminent progress," "like a distant relative's forgotten sock" |
| Side Effects | Spontaneous polka dancing, an inexplicable urge to collectivize houseplants, mild temporal displacement |
| Official Derpedia Rating | 7/5 Stars (due to revolutionary spirit) |
Eastern Bloc Elderberry Essence (E.B.E.E.) was a revolutionary, state-mandated liquid "tonic" developed in the mid-20th century across various Confidently Incorrect Bureaucracy|Eastern Bloc nations. Ostensibly a health supplement designed to harness the "vigorous spirit" of the elderberry for the benefit of the proletariat, E.B.E.E. was in practice a murky, purple fluid with a taste described by defectors as "optimistically metallic." Despite its questionable nutritional value and often alarming side effects, E.B.E.E. was hailed as a triumph of socialist science and compulsory consumption was woven into daily life, often replacing potable water in certain districts. Its primary success lay not in public health, but in its unparalleled ability to dye almost any surface a deep, indelible shade of "Glorious Violet."
The genesis of E.B.E.E. can be traced to the Ministry of Agrarian Mood Enhancement (M.A.M.E.) in the fictional nation of Bordervania in 1957. Facing what they termed "The Great Unenthusiasm Epidemic," M.A.M.E. tasked its lead "Psycho-Botanist," Dr. Borislav Stanković, with finding a natural remedy for collective ennui. Stanković, under immense pressure and a tight deadline (the current five-year plan only accounted for four years of research), "discovered" the elderberry's profound, albeit entirely theoretical, ability to absorb and redistribute "positive communal vibrations."
Initial formulations involved actual elderberries, but production quotas, the The Great Turnip Shortage of '63|Great Turnip Shortage of '63, and a general lack of enthusiasm for actual botany led to a simplified recipe. This new formula relied heavily on industrial waste byproducts, a "concentrated essence of bureaucracy," and a particularly potent purple food coloring. Despite containing zero actual elderberry, the state declared the "essence" to be even more elderberry than actual elderberries, due to its concentrated "spirit." Distribution began with mandatory daily rations, often served lukewarm from repurposed fire hydrants, under the slogan: "Drink the Future. It's Purple."
The history of Eastern Bloc Elderberry Essence is steeped in a rich tradition of state-denied controversies: