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1. YOU NEED THIS Almond Flour Crackers. $19.99 for a 12-ounce box from Walmart. Shop Now. Aside from having a super convincing name (I felt like I simply had to try this product), YOU NEED THIS ...
Maine is the only state with a commercial wild blueberry industry, where growers harvested 105 million pounds in 2021. [76] Wild blueberries are a common ingredient or garnish, and blueberry pie is the official state dessert (when made with wild Maine blueberries). Wild blueberry pancakes, muffins, doughnuts and ice cream are popular in Maine.
J.J. Keebler was the original "king elf" in 1969, and was featured in a classroom film about how animated commercials are made, "Show and Sell", with J.J.'s voice performed by Alan Reed, Sr. [31] Ernie Keebler became "head elf" in 1970. [32] White-haired Ernie wears a green jacket, a white shirt with a yellow tie, a red vest, and floppy shoes. [32]
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[11] One game is a photo contest titled "Westminster Crackers are Everywhere," wherein residents are encouraged to submit creative photographs of them being served the cracker far from home; pictures have included the crackers in Alaska, on beaches, and on cruise ships. As of 2023, the Cracker Festival continues to be hosted as a free October ...
Funyuns is the brand name of an onion-flavored corn extruded snack introduced in the United States in 1969, and invented by Frito-Lay employee George Wade Bigner. [1] Funyuns consist primarily of cornmeal, ring-shaped using an extrusion process, representing the shape of fried onion rings.
Wheatables were baked snack crackers made by the Keebler Company (a subsidiary of the Kellogg Company). They were available in Original Golden Wheat, Toasted Honey Wheat, as well as Wheatables Nut Crisps varieties in Roasted Almond and Toasted Pecan. [1] A Seven Grain variety was also introduced but had previously been discontinued.
The cracker was discontinued once before in 1996 by Nabisco. This sparked the publicized protests of Donna Damon on Chebeague Island and Maine humorist Tim Sample, which eventually led to an episode of CBS News Sunday Morning with Charles Osgood covering the events. The story was picked up by the AP who used Damon's son as a poster boy for the ...