enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Fla-Vor-Ice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fla-Vor-Ice

    Fla-Vor-Ice is the trademark name for a type of freezie. Unlike traditional popsicles, which include a wooden stick, Fla-Vor-Ice is sold in and eaten out of a plastic tube. Also unlike traditional popsicles, it is often sold in liquid form and requires the consumer to freeze the product at home. A vendor, though, may sell them frozen.

  3. Freezie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freezie

    The first brand to introduce the concept of freezies to the United States was Pop-Ice, which was acquired by Jel Sert in 1963. [14] six years later in 1969, Jel Sert launched its own brand of freezies called Fla-Vor-Ice, which quickly gained popularity and became the company's best-selling brand. [2]

  4. Otter Pops - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Otter_Pops

    National Pax introduced Otter Pops in 1970, in competition with Jel Sert's similar product, Fla-Vor-Ice. [2] As of 1990, the product was manufactured by Merrytime Products Inc. of Marshall, Texas. [3] In 1996, Jel Sert acquired the rights to Otter Pops as well. [2] During the 2000s, Jel Sert modified the Otter Pops recipe to add more fruit ...

  5. Calippo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calippo

    This brand-name food or drink product–related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  6. Jel Sert - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jel_Sert

    These two products remained Jel Sert's flagship products until the 1960s when the company acquired Pop-Ice and its line of frozen ice pop desserts. Later that decade Jel Sert introduced Fla-Vor-Ice, another freezer pop, to complement its Flavor-Aid drink mix line. Fla-Vor-Ice quickly became the leading freezer pop brand in the United States. [3]

  7. Zooper Dooper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zooper_Dooper

    There are also limited edition "sourz" and "magic" varieties. Zooper Dooper Sourz come in watermelon, blackcurrant, apple, lemon, raspberry, and grape flavours, while the magic variety comes in lemonade, red creamy soda, banana candy, toffee apple, grape bubblegum, orange sherbert, strawberries & cream, and jaffa.

  8. Soft drink - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soft_drink

    Other common ingredients included lemon, apple, pomegranate, tamarind, jujube, sumac, musk, mint and ice. Middle Eastern drinks later became popular in medieval Europe, where the word "syrup" was derived from Arabic. [19] In Tudor England, 'water imperial' was widely drunk; it was a sweetened drink with lemon flavor and containing cream of ...

  9. List of lemon-lime drink brands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_lemon-lime_drink...

    Lemon-lime drink Sprite. A lemon-lime soft drink or lemon-lime soda (also known as lemonade in the United Kingdom, Australia [1] and New Zealand and as cider in Japan [citation needed] and South Korea [2]) is a carbonated soft drink with lemon and lime flavoring.