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  2. AOL reviewed: Would you pay $40 a month for snacks from Japan?

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/bokksu-review-193525679.html

    The Bokksu Snack Box is a monthly subscription service that ships a box full of treats straight from Japan once a month. It's a cool way to give your loved ones the chance to try authentic ...

  3. These Subscription Boxes Will Make It Mail Day, Every Day - AOL

    www.aol.com/subscription-boxes-mail-day-every...

    Snack Box Subscription Shipped straight from Japan to your door is the Bokksu Snack Box. The boxes come with Japanese candy, tea, and other snacks that are sourced from family-run businesses.

  4. The 15 best subscription gifts of 2024, no shipping required

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/best-subscription-gifts...

    Bokksu Snack Box. $30 at Bokksu. Shaker & Spoon Cocktail Club. $59 at Cratejoy. StitchFix Gift Card. $20 at StitchFix. Yarn of the Month Club. ... Gifting a subscription box, like Trade, is a ...

  5. Graze (company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graze_(company)

    Graze snack boxes. The upper box is the 2018 redesign and the lower box is the pre-2018 design. Nature Delivered Limited, [1] trading as Graze (stylised as graze), is a United Kingdom-based snack company which is owned by Unilever. [5] Graze offers over 200 snack combinations [6] through snack subscription boxes, an online shop [7] and retailers

  6. List of snack foods by country - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_snack_foods_by_country

    This is a list of snack foods by country, specific to or originating in a particular community or region. Snack food is a portion of food often smaller than a regular meal, generally eaten as snacking between meals. [1] Snacks come in a variety of forms including packaged and processed foods and items made from fresh ingredients at home.

  7. Pasalubong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pasalubong

    Pasalubong can be as mundane as fast-food take-outs, [20] toys, snacks or fruit given to children below 10 years of age by a parent coming home from work. [5] It can also be as exotic as a balikbayan box filled with gifts from a foreign country; it is an adaptation of the idea of the pasalubong for the Filipino diaspora.

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