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Kraft Heinz is out with Heinz Dip & Crunch. The company announced the two-in-one dipping package on Tuesday. It's got a new Heinz sauce on one side and "salty potato crunchers" on the other side.
By 1957, Henson began selling packages of dressing mix in stores. [7] [8] Henson began selling the dry ingredients in packages by mail for 75 cents a piece, and eventually devoted every room in his house to the operation. [7] By the mid-1960s, the guest ranch had closed, but Henson's "ranch dressing" mail-order business was thriving. [7] [8]
A close-up view of a clam dip. Some companies mass-produce commercial varieties of prepared clam dip and market them to consumers in grocery stores and supermarkets. [1] [24] Commercial varieties are typically packaged in plastic tubs. [25] Prepared clam dip mixes have also been commercially manufactured and marketed to consumers.
Dippin' Dots are stored and transported at –40 degree Fahrenheit (–40 °C), which is colder than most frozen foods require. The company's development of ultra low temperature freezers, proper storage and transportation got the company involved from about 1988 with selling their equipment for other uses, such as preserving microbiological cultures for fermentation.
Jiffy is a brand of baking mixes marketed by the Chelsea Milling Company in Chelsea, Michigan, that has been producing mixes since 1930. [1] [2] The company was previously named Chelsea Roller Mill. [3] They are known for their products being packaged in a recognizable, small box with the brand's logo in blue.
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The dip is commonly eaten as an hors d'oeuvre, appetizer, or party platter. Many casual restaurant chains offer spinach dip on their menus. [1] Several commercially prepared, mass-produced spinach dips are sold in grocery stores and supermarkets. [5] Some commercial powdered mixes, such as Knorr, are available to flavor the dip.