Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Lacta is currently owned and distributed in Brazil by Mondelez International. In August 2012, Kraft announced that it would split the business in two. The new Mondelez would house the candy business, valued at $31 billion, bringing together global brands such as Cadbury (chocolates) and Ritz (cookies).
The original business was founded by James Pascall in the year 1866. He had set up a small shop off Oxford Street, after having worked for Cadbury. [1]Pascall products were first produced as a joint venture between the Cadbury Brothers and James Pascall at the Cadbury factory in Tasmania, Australia.
Freia factory at Rodeløkka in Grünerløkka A truck with advertisements by the company Freia in Oslo, Norway, in 1920.. Freia was founded by Olaf Larsen (1867–1920) and Fredrik Wilhelm Hjorth Christensen (1851–) in 1889.
Sour Patch Kids were created in the early 1970s by Frank Galatolie, originally under the name "Mars Men," while working as a confectioner at Jaret International. [ 5 ] [ 1 ] In the late 1970s, Cadbury and the Malaco Licorice Company formed the Allen Candy Company in Hamilton, Ontario to produce them. [ 6 ]
Maynards Bassetts is a UK brand of confectionery owned by Mondelez International, introduced in 2016. [1] The brand was created to merge its existing Maynards and Bassett's brands, which the company came to own following its purchase of Cadbury in 2010.
Daim was created by Marabou in Sweden in the 1950s. Marabou originally wanted to produce a version of the American Heath Co.'s bar; its vice president Lars Anderfelt inquired about licensing Heath's exact recipe.
Terrabusi is an Argentine food brand currently owned by US conglomerate Mondelez International. [2] The former manufacturing company had been founded by the Terrabusi brothers in 1911, and soon gained a reputation as a cookies and crackers manufacturer, commercialising its products under several brands.
Certs Classic Mints were developed by American Chicle and introduced into the North American market in 1956. [2] The "Certs" name originated from its approval by Good Housekeeping (as in "certified by Good Housekeeping "), a magazine that, then as now, bestowed the Good Housekeeping Seal on products that pass its quality and reliability tests.