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United States News Title: The Best Discontinued Snack Foods From the Decade You Were Born Its easy to look back on the past and feel a pang of nostalgia. We all long to revisit the places of our youth, but, unfortunately, many of those sites are long gone. Just like that old drive-in or favorite store at the mall, theres another major source of nostalgia: packaged snacks that are gone but not forgotten. Its hard to look back on the foods of our youth without getting a little sentimental. But while you can always fix yourself a peanut butter and jelly sandwich with the crusts cut off just like Mom used to make, there are plenty of snacks that simply dont exist anymore. Nostalgia for the foods of the 1990s is at an all-time high right now, as millennials look back and remember those heady pre-9/11 days when 401(k)s were just a glint in their eye; but all generations feel a nostalgia for their youth to some extent. Even if you grew up in the 60s and dont feel any nostalgia for, say, Mixed Vegetable Jell-O for Salads, you might still be able to conjure up the taste of the long-vanished Nestle Triple Decker Bar in your mind. And its for that reason that we went all the way back to the Roaring 20s and tracked down packaged snack foods from that decade through the 2000s that simply arent around anymore. Many of these were perfectly tasty, but went the way of the dodo because they simply didnt sell, or because parent companies (like Peter Paul, Sperry, Hollywood, Heide, and Curtiss) were swallowed up by larger companies like Nestle, Hershey, and Mars and their products were put out to pasture. But even though you may not be able to find these products on grocery and candy store shelves any more, it doesnt mean that they dont still exist in our memories. 1920s Up until the 1920s, most snacks were simply packaged and not branded (the decades most popular snacks were generic things like nuts, popcorn, potato chips, and penny candies), but that began to change as the 20s rolled around and more companies learned the power of marketing. While 20s innovations like Eskimo Pies, Baby Ruth Bars, and Honey Maid graham crackers are still going strong, R&R Plum Pudding, Cocomalt, Anola Wafers, the oddly-named Chicken Dinner candy bar (so named because it conjured images of a wholesome, filling meal), the Milkshake Bar, and Kleins Lunch Bar are long gone. In fact, its been estimated that more than 30,000 candy bars were introduced during the 20s and 30s! 1930s The candy bar boom continued through the Depression era, picking up steam as more and more people were looking for an inexpensive calorie fix. They found them in long-forgotten candy bars like Cold Turkey, Big Time, 3 Pigs, and the Hollywood Bar (along with ones that have stuck around, like Snickers, 3 Musketeers, and Kit Kat). Other long-gone snacks of the era include Ballard Biscuits, Shefforts Snappy Cheese, Aurora Borealis gum drops, Angels Delight milk chocolate, Bunte Tartines, and a Cracker Jack variation called Cocoanut Corn Crisp. 1940s New snacks introduced during the turbulent 40s included M&Ms, Junior Mints, Almond Joy, and Cheetos, but Town Toast Cookies, Rockwood Silver Cups, Ridleys Root Beer Drops, and Donald Duck-brand peanut butter havent stood the test of time. If you remember those, though, then youll probably remember candy bars including 3 Chubbies, Sperrys Denver Sandwich, Curtiss Moon Spoon, Smooth Sailin, Whiz, and Pecan Pete. 1950s The heady postwar days brought plenty of new culinary innovations like frozen Ore-Ida French fries, Cheese Whiz, Pepperidge Farm butter cookies, Peanut M&Ms, marshmallow Peeps, and Ruffles; but many baby boomers still have a soft spot for Nabiscos Swiss n Ham and Bacon Thins; crème-filled Frosted Devils Food Orbits; Quaker Roy Rogers Cookies; Juicelets; and bars including Powerhouse, Seven Up, Butter Brickle, Welchs Fudge Bar, and Chocolate Penguin. 1960s Salty snacks really came into their own in the 1960s, when treats like Ruffles potato chips, Bugles, Doritos, Pringles, and Easy Cheese first hit the shelves (along with timeless sweet treats Pop-Tarts and Drakes Funny Bones and Yodels). But if you grew up during the decade, you might be longing for another taste of vanished salty treats like Corn Diggers, Dipsy Canoes, Flings, Sip n Chips, Wampum Corn Chips (which many still insist were superior to Fritos), Shapies, Pokes, Salty Surfers, Flings, and Whistles and Daisys (which were released along with Bugles, the only one to survive). Fans of sweet treats most likely also remember Nestles long-gone Calypso and Triple Decker bars. 1970s New snacks of the 1970s included such timeless classics as Orville Redenbachers popcorn, Cup Noodles, Yoplait yogurt, Famous Amos cookies, Hunts Snack Packs (in aluminum cans), Pop Rocks, Starburst, Twix bars, and Ben & Jerrys, but if you grew up in the 70s we bet that there are plenty of vanished snacks youre still pining for. Remember Mars Marathon Bar, the Reggie! Bar (celebrating Reggie Jackson, of course), the Starbar, Nestle Go Ahead, Wonkas Oompas and Super Skrunch, ChocoLite, Jell-O 1-2-3, Kelloggs Danish Go-Rounds, Koogles peanut spread (banana-flavored!), Nickles Banana Flip, Pizza Spins, and Nabisco Tid-Bits? 1980s Kids of the 1980s had some great new snacks to try, including Pop Secret popcorn, Hersheys Kisses with almonds, Jawbreakers, and Cool Ranch Doritos. But plenty of 80s snacks came and went, including Gatorades Gatorgum, Bonkers! bars, Nestles Alpine White bars, Bar None bars (which have been revived but definitely arent the same), Summit cookie bars, Hersheys SMores, Nabiscos Swiss Cheese Crackers, and the beloved Jell-O Pudding Pops. And if you had the opportunity to try a Big Stuf Oreo, a massive Oreo that was only around from 1984 to 1991; or Hostess legendary pudding-filled fried pies, consider yourself lucky. 1990s 1990s kids had a massive array of amazing snacks to dig into after school, including Dunkaroos, Gushers, Fruit by the Foot, Warheads, Bagel Bites, Fruit Roll-Ups, Teddy Grahams, Airheads, and Fun Dip. (Theres a reason why millennials are so nostalgic for this time!) Not all of the most popular 90s treats are still around these days, however; Amazin Fruit snacks, Life Savers Holes, Shark Bites, String Thing, Tongue Splashers gum, cookies and crème-flavored Twix bars, Dannon Sprinklins, PB Max (a masterpiece of chocolate, peanut butter, oats, and cookie), P.B. Crisps, and Keeblers Magic Middles have all gone to the great big snack shop in the sky. Yet somehow, Snackwells are still around! 2000s It may be hard to believe, but the 2000s have already been around for 18 years. And while it seems as if every trip to the supermarket reveals some newfangled snack, plenty of them have gone away for good during this time; we bet that you didnt even realize that some of these were gone! Remember Altoids Sours, Butterfinger BBs, Philadelphias calorific Snack Bars, Planters Cheez Balls, Skittles gum, 3D Doritos, the whoopee pie-esque Oreo Cakesters, and Pop-Tarts Snak-Stix (which were around for one brief, shining moment in 2002 and 2003). And admit it: You probably had no idea that cinnamon Tic-Tacs and lime Skittles were discontinued (in 2009 and 2013, respectively). And dont even get us started on fast food items that we miss! Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: no gnu taxes (#0)
(Edited)
Haven't seen these on my local confectionery's shelves recently:
MY favorite from the 50's, the Pearsons Nut Goodie, is amazingly still being made in St. Paul, Minn...
My favorites were, Hostess Banana and Chocolate Flips, Astro Pops, and the Original Now N. Laters (Chocolate, Banana, Apple)
I miss Choco'lite and the original Bar None. I also miss those canned Planter's cheese balls.
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