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Sakuma drops (サクマドロップス, Sakuma Doroppusu) or fruit drops are a hard candy from Japan, flavored with fruit juice. Available since the Meiji period from 1908, the candies have become an easily recognizable icon in Japan.
Capsule toys containing products. A capsule toy (カプセルトイ, kapuseru toi) is a type of small vending machine in Japan, in which a user inserts a coin and turns the rotating lever to receive a released toy in a capsule.
The company's flagship product is its unique hard square tablet "mint" with a distinct violet aroma and taste. Choward's candies are also available in lemon (flavored with natural oil of lemon), spearmint (flavored with natural oil of spearmint), guava, and peppermint flavors. An opened package of Choward's Violet Mints
This is a list of all known Japanese arcade cabinets, also known as "candy cabinets". The majority are sitdown cabinets, with the occasional upright (Sega Swing, SNK MV25UP-0) and cocktail (Sega Aero Table). Construction is usually of metal and plastic, with wood also being used in earlier cabinets.
The Sagamihara Vending Machine Park (相模原レトロ自販機, Sagamihara Retoro Jihanki) is a collection of retro vending machines in the city of Sagamihara in Kanagawa, Japan. It was created by Tatsuhiro Saitō ( 齋藤辰洋 , Saitō Tatsuhiro ) , the president of the Rat Sunrise used tire shop, originally to entertain waiting customers.
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Hi-Chew candy was first released in 1975. It was re-released in the packaging of individually wrapped candies in February 1996. The origins of Hi-Chew began when Taichiro Morinaga sought to create an edible kind of chewing gum which could be swallowed because of the Japanese cultural taboo against taking food out of one's mouth while eating. [1]
In 1950, Ohashi Shoten (now Kakudai Seika), a Nagoya-based manufacturer of semi-perishable Japanese confections, began manufacturing and selling them as a prize in raffle at candy shops. [ 18 ] In 1973, Morinaga Seika began selling Morinaga Ramune , a tablet confectionery made by a dry process in a container that imitated a codd-neck bottle .