Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weren't there 100,000 bars or something like that? And Sweeties.
There was a 100 Grand candy bar that had peanuts, chocolate, and caramel. Is that what you're thinking of?
Yes! It was my fave.
100 grand does not have peanuts it has crunch bar bits like a crunch/krackel bar.
to add to the list:
nerds (still around but not as abundant)
pixie sticks
fun dip
bit o honey
almond joy and mounds
butterfingers
baby ruth
crunch
weird flavored tootsie rolls like cherry, orange, and vanilla
sweet tarts
blow pops (only get tootsie pops now) and gum in general
sugar babies
sugar daddies
red hots
warheads
fireballs
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tootsie rolls and Mary Janes
Mary Janes were the only candy I was allowed to eat. They were terrible.
Anonymous wrote:Tootsie rolls and Mary Janes
Anonymous wrote:I didn’t care for them but small boxes of good and plenty
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I remember people actually giving out homemade sweets like caramel apples and popcorn balls. We loved them and no one freaked out about “unwrapped” treats.
You had bad parents. Weren't they concerned about razors and needles in the candy? The only unwrapped food items my parents would let us eat were the popcorn balls that my next door neighbor made (nobody wanted these anyway, yuck!).
Total urban myth that seemed to get more press in the mid 80s. My 1970s parents never worried about this. We got caramel apples, popcorn balls, and one neighbor had freshly-made donuts. Yum!
Same here and we ate them, but we didn't covet them as much as we did the manufactured and heavily advertised candy. Delicious homemade baked goods? We could get those any time.
That razor thing just seemed to come out of nowhere one year and that was it. It might have been around the time of the Tylenol poisonings and that serial killer of young boys in Chicago who also worked as a clown or something. I'm not so sure anyone ever actually confirmed a razor blade in an apple anywhere.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone remember the big jolly rancher sticks, they were flat and the same length as a candy bar?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Remember those disgusting taffies that were black and orange? Some things are better left in the past.
Oh I loved those!! They had a weird peanut butter flavor.
Peanut Butter Kisses. The worst. Right up there with Bit o'Honey and Charleston Chews.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I remember people actually giving out homemade sweets like caramel apples and popcorn balls. We loved them and no one freaked out about “unwrapped” treats.
You had bad parents. Weren't they concerned about razors and needles in the candy? The only unwrapped food items my parents would let us eat were the popcorn balls that my next door neighbor made (nobody wanted these anyway, yuck!).
Total urban myth that seemed to get more press in the mid 80s. My 1970s parents never worried about this. We got caramel apples, popcorn balls, and one neighbor had freshly-made donuts. Yum!
Same here and we ate them, but we didn't covet them as much as we did the manufactured and heavily advertised candy. Delicious homemade baked goods? We could get those any time.
Anonymous wrote:Necco wafers! I was convinced that the different colors had different flavors and that the gray ones were the best, when, in reality, they all tasted like chalk.
I still want a gray cat called Necco, though.