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In 1999, Kraft Foods acquired Nabisco, including the Grey Poupon brand. In 2000, Amora-Maille was acquired by Unilever and UK trademark rights to Grey Poupon were assumed by it until 2005 when the rights were sold to G Costa & Company Limited, a subsidiary of Associated British Foods. In 2008, Associated British Foods folded G Costa into AB ...
Grey Poupon is a brand of Dijon mustard which originated in Dijon, France. [2] It is now manufactured by Kraft Heinz. [3] Like other Dijon mustards, Grey Poupon contains a small amount of white wine. Gulden's is the third-largest American manufacturer of mustard, after French's and Grey Poupon. [4]
Maille is a brand of condiments, which originated as a vinegar manufactury in Marseille, France, in 1723.Today it is a subsidiary of multinational consumer goods company Unilever, which produces the brand's mustard at plants globally and markets cornichons, stoneware, salad dressings, kitchen gifts, and cooking oil under the Maille name in company stores, through global retail distribution ...
This year's Academy Awards will see the return of a long-lost cinematic legend: the "Pardon Me" commercials for Grey Poupon mustard. The Associated Press reports that the Dijon mustard brand will ...
Grey Poupon has teamed up with Van Leeuwen to make a limited-edition Grey Poupon Dijon Mustard with Salted Pretzels ice cream. Here's my honest review.
The mustard maker's new wine tastes like anything but the yellow condiment closely associated with hot dogs and sandwiches.
In 1877 one of the most famous Dijon mustard makers, Grey-Poupon, was established as a partnership between Maurice Grey, a mustard maker with a unique recipe containing white wine, and Auguste Poupon, his financial backer. [13] Their success was aided by the introduction of the first automatic mustard-making machine. [13]
A jar of Maille brand Dijon mustard. Dijon mustard (French: Moutarde de Dijon) is a traditional mustard of France. It is named after the city of Dijon in Burgundy, which was the center of mustard making in the late Middle Ages and was granted exclusive rights in France in the 17th century. [1]