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Shredded wheat is a breakfast cereal made from whole wheat formed into pillow-shaped biscuits. It is commonly available in three sizes: original, bite-sized (¾×1 in) and miniature (nearly half the size of the bite-sized pieces).
Weetabix is a breakfast cereal produced by Weetabix Limited in the United Kingdom.It comes in the form of palm-sized (approx. 9.5 cm × 5.0 cm or 4" × 2") wheat biscuits.
The Nabisco Shredded Wheat Factory is a disused factory which formerly produced variants of the shredded wheat breakfast cereal in Welwyn Garden City, in the United Kingdom. It was designed by architect Louis de Soissons to encourage companies to establish factories in the industrial areas of garden cities .
Frosted Mini-Wheats (also known as Frosted Wheats and Mini Max in the United Kingdom, Mini-Wheats! in Canada, and Toppas in certain European countries; also referred as "Mini-Wheats" in the US) is a breakfast cereal manufactured by WK Kellogg Co (formerly Kellogg's) consisting of shredded wheat cereal pieces and frosting.
One 1936 grocery store advertisement for the cereal described it as, "ready to eat, made from pure whole wheat . . . Cooked, shredded, and toasted to a delicious golden brown; new in flavor." [4] Bite-sized Shredded Ralston was described in one early promotional article as whole wheat that had been "shredded and baked into crisp-bite-size ...
In Canada, production began in 1939 at Lewis Avenue, Niagara Falls, Ontario. [1] As of 2024, this plant was still in operation. [2]Shreddies were produced under the Nabisco name until the brand in Canada was purchased in 1993 by Post Cereals, [3] [4] whose parent company in 1995 became Kraft General Foods, which sold Post to Ralcorp in 2008 and is now Post Foods Canada Corp., a unit of Post ...
Sanitarium introduced Weet-Bix™ Bites in 2012 as a bite-sized version of the popular breakfast cereal. It is a wheat-based cereal infused with fruit and honey. As of 2024, Weet-Bix Bites are available in four varieties: apricot, wild berry, honey crunch, and, most recently, coco crunch. [5]
The Shredded Wheat Company began producing Triscuit in 1903 in Niagara Falls, New York. [2] The name Triscuit may have come from a combination of the words electricity and biscuit [4] or the commonly held belief that "tri" is a reference to the three ingredients used (wheat, oil, and salt), [5] [6] but this is disputed due to conflicting adverts and poor records. [7]