Candy Corn, Tootsie Rolls, Snickers, and Hershey's Chocolate products are popular with trick or treaters. Other than how good they taste, what else is there to know about these yummy treats? Take a look at some of these fun candy facts.
Candy Corn was invented in the 1880s by George Rennigner.
The oldest company to produce the surgary corn is The Goelitz Company which is now known as the Jelly Belly Company. They have used the same recipe for over 100 years. Can't get enough of this Halloween classic? At the moment, you can buy 10 pound for $81 dollars. Approximately 9 billion pieces of it will be made each year.
Tootsie Rolls were invented in 1896 by Leo Hirshfield. The product is named after Hirschfield's daughter whose nickname was "Tootsie". In 1896 Tootsie Roll cost one cent. In fact, it was the first "individually wrapped penny candy". Over 100 years later, consumers can still find Tootsie Rolls for a penny. The Tootsie Company makes 64 million Tootsie Rolls a day.
A fun online Chicago Tribune article suggested that if your favorite Halloween treat is Snickers, it means you probably have an indecisive personality. "Do you want chocolate? Do you want nuts? You don't know. Or do you?" Snickers is the most popular chocolate bar in the entire world. Snickers got its name from a horse. There are around sixteen peanuts in each Snickers bar. They are made by The Mars Company.
Hershey's produces around 30 different chocolate products that can be given out to trick or treaters on Halloween. Most people probably know that Hershey's Chocolates are made in Hershey, Pennsylvania. The town got its name from the chocolate and its inventor Milton Hershey. But did you know that before it was named Hershey, the town was known as Derry Church? Here is a link to The Hershey Company.
According to AOL, the average American household spends $45 dollars on Halloween food and candy. Candied apples are a popular Halloween treat, but their origin remains unknown. Dan Walker is sometimes credited with the invention of the caramel apple, but others believe he was only involved in marketing caramel apples while working at Kraft Foods in the 1950s.
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