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Yodels. Yodels are frosted, cream-filled cakes made by the Drake's company, which was bought by McKee Foods after former owner Old HB went bankrupt. Yodels are distributed on the East Coast of the United States. [citation needed] They are similar to Hostess Brands' Ho Hos and Little Debbie's Swiss Cake Rolls.
Ho Hos are small, cylindrical, frosted, cream-filled chocolate snack cakes [1] with a pinwheel design based on the Swiss roll. Made by Hostess Brands , [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] they are similar to Yodels by Drake's and Swiss Cake Rolls by Little Debbie .
Produced by many commercial bakeries, common brands include Ho Hos and Yodels, which are smaller-sized rolls for individual consumption. When the filling is ice cream, it is commonly referred to as an "ice cream cake roll", and although they can vary, these often consist of chocolate cake with vanilla ice cream.
The company makes snack cake products such as Devil Dogs, Funny Bones, Coffee Cakes, Ring Dings, and Yodels. Drake's has traditionally been marketed primarily in the Northeastern U.S., but it expanded to the Mid-Atlantic and Southeastern U.S. regions in 2016. The products are made under the Orthodox Union kosher certification guidelines.
It was announced on January 28, 2013, that McKee Foods would pay $27.5 million for Hostess Brands' Drake's brand, which includes Ring Dings, Yodels, and Devil Dogs products. [8] The bankruptcy court approved the purchase on April 9, 2013. [9] As of 2013, McKee ships more than 900 million cartons of Little Debbie products each year. [10]
Hostess went out of business on November 16, 2012, stopping all production. The Hostess name and brands were acquired by private equity firms Apollo Global Management and Metropoulos & Co.; in June 2013, the new Hostess Brands reopened a Kansas product plant and announced that Ding Dong production would resume on July 15, 2013.
A classic pink Sno Ball. Sno Balls are cream-filled chocolate cakes covered with marshmallow frosting and coconut flakes [1] formerly produced and distributed by Hostess and currently owned by The J.M. Smucker Company.
This is a list of plant hybrids created intentionally or by chance and exploited commercially in agriculture or horticulture. The hybridization event mechanism is documented where known, along with the authorities who described it.