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3. Keebler Fudge Magic Middles. Neither the chocolate fudge cream inside a shortbread cookie nor versions with peanut butter or chocolate chip crusts survived.
The company acquired Dallas-based corn chip producer Circle D Foods, Inc. in 1959. [1] By 1960, King Kone's products were sold in 250,000 supermarkets and restaurants in the United States and its "Dipsy Doodles" brand of corn chips was the second-best selling corn chip in the country behind Fritos. King Kone's snack division also produced ...
Bugles were developed by a food engineer, Verne E. Weiss of Plymouth, Minnesota. [3] Bugles were test-marketed in 1965 and introduced nationally in early 1966 as one of several new General Mills snacks, [4] including flower-shaped Daisys [sic]; wheel-shaped Pizza Spins; [5] tube-shaped Whistles; [6] cheddar cheese-flavored Buttons; and bow-shaped, popcorn-flavored Bows, [7] all of which were ...
Old Dutch Foods kept the Humpty Dumpty label, and still sells all their flavors of chips and snacks in the USA. In Canada, Humpty Dumpty's potato chip line were rebranded "Old Dutch", as it was already an established brand of potato chip in other parts of Canada; they kept the "Humpty Dumpty" name for its other snacks.
Wise Foods, Inc. is a company based in Berwick, Pennsylvania, that makes snacks and sells them through retail food outlets in 15 eastern seaboard states, as well as Vermont, Ohio, West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Washington, D.C. Best known for its several varieties of potato chips, Wise also offers Cheez Doodles, bagged popcorn, tortilla chips, pork rinds, onion rings, Dipsy Doodle ...
The brand also has a sea salt-flavored cracker and offers other snack options, including tortilla chips, veggie straws, and more. "Best crackers I’ve ever eaten," writes one Amazon user in a review.
Speaking of dip, feel free to go easy and put out some bread, veggies, and crackers with a simple homemade option, like our cranberry whipped feta dip, our caramelized onion dip, our muhammara, or ...
Cheese Nips (originally stylized as "Cheese-Nips") were a small cheese-flavored cracker [1] manufactured by Mondelez International under its brand, Nabisco, they were originally used to compete against Sunshine Biscuit's (now Kellogg's) Cheez-It crackers.