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  2. Beloved Candies From Childhood That No Longer Exist

    www.aol.com/beloved-candies-childhood-no-longer...

    Released in the early ’70s to coincide with the movie “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory,” Wonka Bars weren’t exactly a runaway hit: Made by candy newbie Quaker, they often melted during ...

  3. Crawford's - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crawford's

    Crawford's Biscuits - Press for Ice Cream Wafers A Crawford's custard cream biscuit. In 1923, the company advertised several biscuit varieties which commemorated royalty and its marriages: [1] York – the marriage of the Duke of York to Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon; Wedding Bells – the marriage of Princess Mary to Viscount Lascelles

  4. Sealtest Dairy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sealtest_Dairy

    Sealtest building in Cleveland in the 1960s. Sealtest had milk and ice cream plants across the midwestern and northeastern part of the United States, with large operations in Chicago, Milwaukee, Cleveland, La Crosse, Wisconsin, Huntington, Indiana, Rockford, Illinois, Philadelphia, Baltimore and New York City.

  5. Ice cream sandwich - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_cream_sandwich

    In the United Kingdom, an ice cream wafer, consisting of a small block of ice cream between two rectangular wafer biscuits, was a popular alternative to a cone up until the 1980s. [citation needed] A "nougat wafer" was also available, consisting of a layer of mallow sandwiched between two wafers and coated with chocolate around the edges ...

  6. 14 Nostalgic '70s Recipes We Really Want to Make a Comeback - AOL

    www.aol.com/14-nostalgic-70s-recipes-really...

    Food fads come and go, but some should stay forever. These 1970s recipes, like Watergate salad, Harvey Wallbanger cake, and fondue, were popular decades ago but never should have gone out of fashion.

  7. Antonelli Bros Ltd - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antonelli_Bros_Ltd

    Company founder, Domenico Antonelli was born in Picinisco, Lazio, Italy.After moving to the UK, he started to manufacture ice cream cones and wafers in 1912. [1] Working with his sons Ernest, Luigi and Romolo, the company was known as The International Wafer Company, located at Bridgewater Street, Salford and Ayres Road Old Trafford.

  8. Swensen's - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swensen's

    The company was founded in 1948 by Earle Swensen, who learned to make ice cream while serving in the U.S. Navy during World War II. [2] Swensen opened his first shop at the corner of Union and Hyde Streets, along the cable car tracks in Russian Hill in San Francisco at what had been a failed ice cream parlor. [3]

  9. 99 Flake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/99_Flake

    A 99 Flake, with a Cadbury Flake chocolate bar. A 99 Flake, 99 or ninety-nine [1] is an ice cream cone with a Cadbury Flake inserted in the ice cream. The term can also refer to the half-sized Cadbury-produced Flake bar, itself specially made for such ice cream cones, and to a wrapped product marketed by Cadbury “for ice cream and culinary use”.