Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The original products manufactured by Lees are the Lees Macaroon bar and the Lees Snowball. [3] The company subsequently added other products, later adding tablet, fudge and coconut ice bars. [4] [5] In 1982, Lees set up Heather Cameron Foods, expanding the company to manufacture meringues. Lees bought out the company seven years later ...
This logo image consists only of simple geometric shapes or text. It does not meet the threshold of originality needed for copyright protection, and is therefore in the public domain . Although it is free of copyright restrictions, this image may still be subject to other restrictions .
This is a list of brand name confectionery products. Sugar confectionery includes candies ( sweets in British English), candied nuts, chocolates, chewing gum, bubble gum, pastillage , and other confections that are made primarily of sugar.
The nationwide social justice protests after the death of George Floyd have triggered a reckoning for consumer brands with questionable names and logos. From Aunt Jemima to Uncle Ben's, a ...
Shoney's continued to operate Lee's along with their own Captain D's and Shoney's Restaurants until 1995, when Lee's was sold to RTM Restaurant Group in Atlanta, Georgia. [5] [6] In May 2003, the chain had 29 company-owned locations and 125 franchised locations. In October 2003, Lee's Famous Recipes Inc. purchased the chain from RTM.
In the 1980s, Trolli exports to North America grew to 40 tonnes per day, and in 1986 Mederer built a production facility in Creston, Iowa.Trolli's US operations were sold to Favorite Brands International in 1996 and was subsequently owned by Nabisco (1999), Kraft Foods (2000), Wrigleys (2005), and Farley's & Sathers Candy Company (2006) [5] which was merged with Ferrara Candy Company in 2013.
Uncle O'Grimacey: 1977–1990s: Grimace's green Irish Uncle who visited every St. Patrick's Day CosMc: 1980s–1999: An alien who sporadically appeared to trade items for McDonald's food Bernice: 1992–mid-1990s: A strange creature who showed up in McDonaldland occasionally Vulture: 1980s–1990s
Hoadley's Chocolates had its origins in A. Hoadley and Company, a jam company founded in South Melbourne in 1889 by English businessman Abel Hoadley, which originally manufactured jams but expanded its range to include preserved fruits, candied fruits and peels, and sauces using fruit from Hoadley's orchards at nearby Burwood In 1895, Hoadley opened the Rising Sun Preserving Works in St Kilda ...