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Arnott's Shapes are a popular line of savoury biscuits produced by Arnott's in Australia and New Zealand. [1] Over 53 million packets of Shapes are consumed each year in Australia. [2] Shapes were first introduced in 1954, in Victoria, by Brockhoff Biscuits. [3] [4] Savoury was the first flavour, followed soon by Barbecue, Chicken Crimpy, and ...
The original Arnott's logo depicted a multi-coloured parrot sitting atop a T-shaped perch, eating a cracker biscuit. During a radio interview on ABC, William Arnott's great-great-great-grandson stated that the logo represents the proverb "Honesty is the best policy" where the phrase was constructed from "On his T, is the best pol' (polly) I see".
Brockhoff Biscuits was an Australian manufacturer of biscuits founded in 1860 by Adolf F. Brockhoff. [3] [4] In 1963 Arnott's Biscuits and the company merged, although they continued to trade under both names for several years until the "Brockhoff" name was completely dropped in the late 1970s.
Monte Carlo biscuits are an Australian sweet biscuit that have been manufactured since 1926 (98 years ago) () by Arnott's Biscuits Holdings. [1] Each biscuit comprises two biscuit layers sandwiching a creamy filling. While many such biscuits are moulded to a design, both sides of the Monte Carlo biscuit are rough.
Crackers (roughly equivalent to savory biscuits in the United Kingdom and the Isle of Man) are usually flat, crisp, small in size (usually 75 millimetres (3.0 in) or less in diameter) and made in various shapes, commonly round or square.
Tiny Teddy is a brand of sweet biscuits manufactured by Arnott's in Australia, since 1991. Each biscuit is small and teddy bear-shaped, and variations in facial expression have been given the names Happy, Sleepy, Grumpy, Cheeky, Silly and Hungry. [1] They are similar in appearance to the North American Teddy Grahams.
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In the 1993 book The Story of Arnott's Famous Biscuits, Ross Arnott states that Sao was the name of a sailing boat [a] which his grandfather (Arnott's founder William Arnott) saw on Lake Macquarie, of which he said "That would make a good name for a biscuit." [7] 1905 advertisement for SAO biscuits in the Sydney Morning Herald