Wildman
Established Member
aniseed balls, pineapple chunks, winter mix, blackjacks, everton mints,, chocolate honeycomb
The earliest sweets I remember were Tobermory Tatties, Sweet Cigarettes and Fry's 5 Centre Chocolate Cream which we sometimes got at school for some reason. Tobermory Tatties were the best. Guaranteed to rot your soft little teeth and if that didn't get you, it had a little plastic thing in the middle to choke you!!
I remember them as flat circular things made from a toffee like material. They were coated in cinnamon. They ware also known as lucky tatties. Macaroon bars were a 110% sugar hit. They nipped my throat, they were so sweet. Soft and quite crumbly, coconut coated. For sweetness, it takes a lot to beat marshmallows. I have managed to break my marshmallow addiction. I would only stop when I began to feel sick.Are Tobermory Tatties anything like Lee's Macaroon Bars?
That's the stuff. We called the hard licorice sticks Spanish in those days.I remember it very well, sent your mouth different colours – God knows what was in it. We used to pronounce it cailie as in Kay lee, we weren’t so far from Yorkshire on the Southbank of the Humber. Ian
Back in the day just after the war we would buy a couple of ounces of something with a name like kayli. It was a sort of crystalline powder and we'd eat it using sticks of hard liquorice (sucking and dipping)
This was in Yorkshire, anyone remember it and the spelling?
Ah yes, Midget gems were not midget gems unless they were Lions ones - rock hard they were, also did sports mixture and fruit salad - and were in boxes with a non stick paper insert.Lion brand Midget gems. My grandad who lived with us until I was about 5 used to come home from the WMC a couple of times a week with a quarter of them and share them with me.
Looks like I'll be buying a box from aquarterof.co.uk
It was around for a long time then! I was born in the early 1940's.I remember this from my childhood too - 1990's we had a sweet shop close by that had hundreds of jars of sweets where you could have a quarter of something nice.
I remember loving kayli - it was like a fizzy flavoured sugar.
We too used to use hard liquorice to eat it - the best was bassets hard liquorice sticks, you used to bite the end off, and use it like a shovel
Yep, and vimto tooIt wasn't the same as sherbet dip as that seemed more powdery. Perhaps the local shopkeeper knocked up his own version.
We were so starved of sugar we would eat sweetened condensed milk until caught and I had a liking for toothpaste.
Anyone remember Dandelion and Burdock soft drink and Tizer?
Spanish gold tobacco is that the sweet tobacco of my childhood I wonder? It was sold in a cardboard tube rather like the sherbert fountains?Spanish gold tobacco and mini cadburys chocolate dispensers and chocolate smokers kits (different times) at Christmas
At last - peanut brittle! And how about the Brazil nut toffee? It was in a big tray and the shopkeeper broke bits off with tiny chromed hammer designed for the job. How I wanted one of those little hammers as a kid.Wives can join in too Amazing bars, Aztec bars, Mint Cracknel , Caramac , Butter Snap , Peanut Brittle Golf Ball bubble gum .
I can remember Fry's 5 Boys and I immediately get a vivid picture of them. I can see the wrapper quite clearly. I'm in Edinburgh, so these boys got all the way up to Scotland too.Do you know? You are probably the first person that I have come across who remembers Fry's 5 Boys. There used to be a vending machine on our local station. I don't know if it was a West Country thing - what with Fry's being in Bristol - or whether it was available nationwide.
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