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Giving Candy The Business

Wednesday, December 14th, 2005

So I’ve been at this whole “Candy Critic” thing for a few years now and I’ve put a whole lot into it. I’ve traveled around, harassed people that travel to buy me candy and eaten things I don’t even want to talk about. One of my travels took me to the National Candy Expo in Chicago, don’t even try and go because you have to be invited. But it does exist, a convention completelly dedicated to the love of candy, or so thought.

You see the candy industry is a billion dollar machine; these fun little snacks we eat are big money to people. Now I don’t want to start by putting down all those in the candy industry, but I have to say that most of them are dull or even mean. To make it public I don’t get paid for doing Candy Critic, sure I’m interested and I have some plans in the works, but I started this site because I love candy, not because I thought I’d be rich. So I’m not really a member of this great machine, well not yet.

What I came across at the National Candy Expo was a bunch of suits that wanted to know how giving me a sample would help their sales. Now I can’t say I didn’t expect people to not think about the bottom line in a trade show, but it’s candy. Relax a little and remember that your bottom line is about how fun life can be, and maybe you should focus on fun a little more. Maybe I just want to believe in the world that Willy Wonka projected, or maybe I just like candy more than business.

Either way I welcome all candy companies to contact me and let me know what you’re up to. Send me samples and I’ll review them, tell me cool stories and I’ll read them and maybe put them up on the site. I just can’t promise that a review will increase your sales quota for the next quarter.

Chris Stewart
www.candycritic.org
chris@candycritic.org

A little advice from Chris at Candycritic.org

Wednesday, October 26th, 2005

Are you bored of candy? Are you saying to yourself “man, I wish I could try something new?” Well you my friend are just not looking hard enough. Since starting candycritic.org I’ve learned something very valuable. There are more kinds of candy in this world than any one person could ever try. Trust me, that’s pretty much the point of Candy Critic, and I look at candy shelves, and the e-mails I receive and realize that I’ve only cracked the top of this iceberg.

So you want to try something new do you? I suggest starting in your neighborhood, look around for small grocery stores from far off places.
People like treats and when they open a store carrying foods from other lands often candy is included. If you have no such stores in your town, the Internet is a great resource too.

The next step is to be a little brave, can’t read the package, go for it anyways. I always figure that there are a bunch of kids somewhere in the world enjoying what ever might be in that package with the little squiggles on it so it’s got to be good enough for me. I’ll tell you now, you’ll eat a few things that might not sit well with you, but when you bite into a new treat that taste great you’ll thank me.

Complain to candy companies. Yes I said it, if you find that candy companies aren’t living up to their creative possibilities call, write, or e-mail. Tell them you want something new, don’t worry either, it’s not up to you to figure out what they should make, people make good money trying to find the next big treat. If you’re going to complain also be sure to compliment when appropriate. If you try something new that blows your mind tell them. Often treats are put out as a test market but if people really like them then they’ll stick around, but if they don’t think they’re doing well they’ll pull it and I’ve lost many a great treat because of this.

I guess what I’m saying is don’t just eat something sweet for the sugar go for the adventure too.

Edible Straws?

Thursday, July 14th, 2005

According to a press release posted this morning from Publicite Ad Factory, flavored, edible straws are hitting the market!

MONTREAL, July 14, 2005 – Imagine a drink straw that adds flavor to one’s beverage. Better yet, imagine that one can eat this same straw – just like a piece of their favorite candy – as soon as the drink is finished!

New and now available in North America, the SlikaStik is about to change the way people drink their beverages. These delicious, scrumptious, edible candy straws come in an assortment of stock flavors and work best with cold drinks, allowing people to transform, for example, an ordinary glass of milk into a magnificent cotton candy taste experience. Or take a plain glass of water and a strawberry SlikaStik and presto, one has a strawberry treat!

“It’s really very simple,” says Publicite Ad Factory President & CEO Andrew Severs. “This incredibly, environmentally friendly product is actually an edible candy straw that adds its flavor to whatever one is drinking. When they finish their drink, they eat the straw. That means there is no straw to throw away and less plastic or paper to go into a landfill.”

Stock SlikaStik flavors include: Blueberry, Chocolate Mint, Cotton Candy, Strawberry and Vanilla. But the choices are limitless as flavors can be customized, if desired – use a custom, limited-edition flavor for special events or limited-time promotions.

“This is a unique and successful product that we sourced out from the United Kingdom,” says Mr. Severs. “It is amazing and unbelievable. When you first look at the product, you would say that’s impossible – to create a delicious, edible yet practical straw. It looks solid and there is no hole for the liquid to move up the straw! People think I’ve gone off my rocker but with a creative imagination anything can be possible. Like the Brits would say, ‘you’re absolutely bonkers if you expect me to believe that this solid piece of candy can be a drink straw!’ But should a client hesitate, I just tell them to give it a try. Once they do, they’re hooked.”

The SlikaStik secret is that the straws have no holes at first. But as one uses the straw, it starts to become hollow and the more it is used the larger the hollow portion, or hole, becomes.

The straws are perfectly suited for specialty or candy retailers. They make excellent choices for birthday parties, fundraising projects or just as a surprise to put a smile on a child’s face. Bars or nightclubs can offer them as an adult treat through innovative drink promotions – as the straws tend to lend their flavor to the respective beverages, they’ll add a little kick to the drink.

SlikaStik, however, is not to be used with hot beverages. A version, made with Isomalt, is available for people who can’t eat regular sugar products.

“The major dilemma consumers will have with this product is deciding whether to eat the straws like an old fashioned candy stick or use it as a drinking straw before eating it,” says Mr. Severs. “And what a fun dilemma that is to have! Plus, unlike plastic or paper straws that end up in the trash, our straws just end up in your tummy!”

Even though the product is ideal for kids, adults can have a blast with them too. Check out our websites at either www.apartment1g.com (ad free) or www.members.tripod.com/globalfun (with ads) to get a taste of what goodies are in store for your customers and clients.

“We’ve done confectionery products for our clients before,” says Mr. Severs, pointing to promotional and corporate gifts that have proved popular in the past. “But we’ve never seen anything like this before. Further when I was younger, I dealt with a large selection of candy offerings when I worked for my father’s wholesale confectionary distributorship during my summer holidays. Even then there was a lot of choice out there but nothing compares to these amazing and tasty straws.”

With these straws no drink, party or promotion will ever be dull again. Amazingly, the edible straws still allow people to blow bubbles into their beverages just like they did when they were little kids – with a regular straw.

The amazing, incredible, edible SlikaStik. It will change the ordinary into the extraordinary!

To see a similar product that we offer called Rip Straws, please click here

Are you ready to meet the NEW Mr. Willy Wonka

Monday, July 11th, 2005

With the launch of the remake of the classic film, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, we would love to hear your opinions about the new rendering and whether or not it was a wise thing to tinker with a true candy and film classic.

Some people claim that “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” while others believe in progress..

At Candyblog.org, we want to know where you stand…..

A Brief History of Diet Soda

Thursday, July 7th, 2005

DIET RIOT
Published in the Baltimore Sun
7 July 2005

By Andrea K. Walker

First there was Diet Rite, then Tab and Diet Pepsi. In 1982, Diet Coke arrived on the scene. Now Coke Zero is the latest entry on the market

WHEN consumers tasted Diet Rite cola in 1958, and many puckered up at the bitter aftertaste, it began a half-century quest – still continuing – to produce a diet soda that didn’t taste like one.

America since has landed a man on the moon, corralled the laser for medical use and developed the World Wide Web. But formulating the perfect diet soda is still a work in progress – the latest effort being the Coca-Cola Co.’s launch of Coca-Cola Zero.

Diet brands are the fastest-growing segment of the soda market. Last year, diet sodas made up 29 percent of the market, compared with 71 percent for regular-calorie soda, according to Beverage Digest, a trade publication. Sales of diet sodas are going up, while regular soda sales have been slipping – evidence that there are plenty of loyal diet drinkers, especially women, who like the taste or will tolerate it to save a few calories.

Still, Coca-Cola Zero is carefully avoiding labeling itself as diet. Its marketing is geared to a demographic, such as young people and the most macho of men, who see a stigma attached to the word diet.

“We made a point of not calling it diet,” said Scott Williamson, a Coca-Cola spokesman. “There are a group of folks out there, primarily young adults, who for a lot of reasons, some taste, some brand personality, won’t drink diet sodas. They may not like them because of the taste or stigma attached to the word ‘diet.’”

With Zero, Coca-Cola says it has finally been able to create a diet soda that tastes like the classic version of the 109-year-old soda. Like other recent introductions in the diet-soda market, Coke is seizing on advances in artificial sweeteners that make them taste more and more like sugar. Beverage companies are using new sweeteners, such as Splenda, and better blending existing sweeteners. Coca-Cola Zero, for instance, combines aspartame with acesulfame potassium (ace-k).

“You’re seeing a wider array of sweetener alternatives,” said Gary Hemphill, managing director of Beverage Marketing Corp., a New York research and consulting firm. “There are more good options than there ever have been. Sometimes, the sweeteners work even better in tandem as blends.”

Royal Crown Cola’s Diet Rite was the sole diet soda on the market for several years until Coca-Cola followed with Tab in 1963. The hot-pink cans suited the era in which it was introduced. Pepsi-Cola introduced its first diet soda in the 1970s.

The first diet sodas were sweetened with a combination of the artificial sweeteners cyclamates and saccharin. The drinks didn’t take off as quickly as manufacturers hoped, but fast-food hadn’t become a mainstay and obesity wasn’t yet considered a national concern.

Cyclamates were banned by the Food and Drug Administration for a short time beginning in 1970 because of concerns that they caused cancer. Soda makers turned to saccharin, which consumers complained had left even a more bitter aftertaste. Attempts to mix it with sugar didn’t satisfy customer complaints. Saccharin was banned, from 1977 to 1991, because of claims that it was carcinogenic.

The introduction of aspartame in 1982 was a turning point for the industry, because it tasted more like sugar and wasn’t burdened by cancer worries.

“The introduction of aspartame in the early ’80s made Diet Coke and Diet Pepsi into very big brands,” said John Sicher, editor and publisher of Beverage Digest.

Industry experts expect the variety of diet sodas to continue to grow as tasting technology advances. Similar developments have influenced the toothpaste world, where flavors such as cinnamon and vanilla are becoming more common.

“Taste is a huge, huge thing,” said Jim Trebilcock, senior vice president of marketing for Texas-based Cadbury Schweppes Americas Beverages, the maker of Dr Pepper, 7UP and other soda brands. “First and foremost, the American public wants a good-tasting diet soda.”

It’s not enough anymore for sodas to have just one diet version. Coca-Cola has nine varieties, including Diet Coke with lime or lemon, diet Cherry Coke, diet Vanilla Coke and a low-carb version. Pepsi has three and Dr Pepper has two, including the recently introduced Cherry Vanilla Diet Dr Pepper.

Diet Coke still has many loyal drinkers, mostly women who have included the beverage in their diet for years. Coca-Cola is hoping to tap into a new market with its new zero-calorie version. This year, the company tried to tap the low-carb crowd with the introduction of Coke with Splenda.

It has rolled out an extensive marketing campaign, including a remake of its award-winning 1970s commercial jingle, “I’d Like to Buy the World a Coke.” The new version: “I’d like to teach the world to chill, and take time to stop and smile.”

Analysts caution that there is some risk of saturating the market and confusing consumers with so many variations of a product.

“There is nothing riskier in business than trying to introduce a new product,” said Chuck Donofrio, chief executive officer of Carton Donofrio Inc., a Baltimore advertising and marketing firm. “But the potential awards are huge and that’s why people are willing to take the risk of failing.”

MODERATOR’s NOTE: I liked this article because it was brief and provided a great short history of a product that parallels with the candy industry.

And theater candy isn’t expensive enough?

Tuesday, June 21st, 2005

(Raleigh, NC), June 20, 2005 – The NC/SC National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) is calling on families and other movie fans across North Carolina voice their opposition to a proposed increase in taxes on movie tickets and candy.

Under the proposed 2005 Appropriations Act now under consideration in Raleigh, the tax on movie tickets would increase from one percent to seven percent per ticket.

Other legislation is pending to increase the tax on candy sold in movie theatres. NC/SC NATO is encouraging citizens to contact their state legislators and urge them to vote against the increases.

“Going to the movies is one of the last affordable forms of recreation for many families,” said Casey Brock, president of NC/SC NATO. “This tax will increase the price of the movie-going experience for families, and could put it out of reach financially for some families.”

MODERATOR’S NOTE – Why not bring your own concession candy to the movies . If this tax were to take place, a candy bar could cost $10. Is nothing sacred?

To view our selection of Concession Candy, at reasonable prices, please click here.

King Size Candy soon to be extinct in the UK

Wednesday, June 1st, 2005

IAFRICA.COM – HEALTH & FITNESS SECTION
1 JUNE 2005

NO MORE KING SIZE CANDY BARS?

King-size candy bars which have helped fuel Britain’s expanding appetite and waistline will be phased out by some food companies in compliance with an official campaign against obesity, media reported on Monday.

Cadbury Schweppes, the conglomerate which produces the famed British Cadbury chocolates, and Mars, the Masterfoods subsidiary and maker of sugary snacks M&Ms, Milky Way and Twix, said some of their extra-hefty sweet confections would disappear from next year.

The country’s Food and Drink Federation, which also includes major multinational companies like Coca-Cola, Nestle and Unilever, Monday published a food “manifesto” in which its members vowed to “explore new approaches for individual portion sizes to help reduce over-consumption”.

The move is seen as an industry-wide bid to impose some self-regulation rather than face stringent state rules aimed at curtailing Britain’s health crisis.

Politicians and health specialists believe obesity has reached crisis levels here, with children “choking on their own fat”, according to an expert quoted in an alarming official report in May.

Britain has the world’s fastest-growing fat problem, with childhood obesity tripling in two decades and fully three-quarters of adults now overweight or obese.

Cadbury said on Sunday its king-size Crunchie and Boost bars would be put out of production from the end of February, while Masterfoods said it was phasing out its 100g Mars and 85g Snickers, according to the Daily Telegraph.

But the Mars and Snickers bars will be replaced by something equally large — a two-portion sweet which will be sold as a snack to share.

“The name king-size will be phased out”, Masterfoods’ Michael Jenkins told the newspaper, explaining that the large portions “will be changed so they are shareable or can be consumed on more than one occasion”.

Nestle, the Swiss food giant, has rejected calls to shelve its giant-size versions of Lion bars, Kit Kats and Rolos.

The products, packed with fat, refined sugars and calories are mostly consumed by “young men with active lifestyles”, a company spokesman said.

Consumer advocates dismissed the candy makers’ moves as superficial and intended only to deflect criticism, not change Britons’ junk food habits

Topps Candy not on top?

Thursday, May 26th, 2005

Bazooka Bubble Gum, an American icon if there ever was one, is manufactured by Topps , an American candy instutution.

In the never changing and often depressing world of “the candy industry”, another major player may be in trouble…

According to New York Business, an online periodical,

TOPPS MAY SELL CANDY BUSINESS

Manhattan-based Topps Co. is considering putting its candy unit up for sale amid pressure from shareholders who are waging a proxy fight.

Topps said last week that it had hired Lehman Brothers earlier this year to evaluate strategic alternatives, including a sale of the confectionary business, which includes Bazooka bubble gum. Topps also makes collectible items such as baseball cards.

The announcement follows calls by minority shareholder Pembridge Capital Management to elect three new board members who would consider selling all or part of the company. The Manhattan-based hedge fund says the company’s operating performance and declining stock price have slid over the past five years, while executives have been paid “egregious” salaries and bonuses. ..

I guess it is a sign of the times.

First they get rid of the bubble gum sticks that came in every package of trading cards (it is said that this was done to protect the last card from being discolored) and now Topps may be getting rid of their candy division altogether.

Stay tuned…….

Juiceful no longer?

Thursday, May 19th, 2005

Good question and we hope not!

According to CandyBusiness magazine, “Ragolds will close it’s doors at year’s end… Best known in recent years for it’s Juiceful’s brand with liquid fruit juice centers….the closing is “unavoidable” as its long term financial outlook is poor…”

We have not been able to confirm this report but surely hope that this candy favorite is not discontinued…

To stock up on Juicefuls, please click here

Goldenberg Peanut Chews get a cosmetic facelift!

Tuesday, May 10th, 2005

Goldenberg Peanut Chews, also know as chew-ets, just got a cosmetic makeover in keeping with their 60 plus year history.

Originally made by the Goldenberg Candy Company in Philadelphia, the company was acquired by Just Born in 2004.

The formula remains the same and according to their website, “Weekly truckloads of fresh Georgia whole peanuts are fresh roasted on site and blended with a unique combination of syrups to produce the Peanut Chews’® center. Each piece is then cut and covered in a rich, delicious chocolatey coating, after which the Peanut Chews® are cooled and packaged. ”

Although the candy is primarily popular along the Eastern Seaboard, it does have a cult following amongst retro candy lovers around the globe.

Whether the new label is an improvement is open for discussion ( hey, isn’t that what a blog is all about?) but the taste remains the same…

In 2005, they switched from their original retro looking label to a new one which can be viewed below:

To view the Dark Chocolate Peanut Chews, please click here