Kola cubes and pineapple cubes
they were nice
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Reply to: Shameless Nostalgia
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Previously on "Shameless Nostalgia"
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When I went to football as a boy I'd always take a Toffee Crisp and a Caramac for half-time. Unfortunately they were always scoffed on the train before we got there.
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'moon dust' ? A black sachet of powder that fizzed on your tongue.
Are 'curly wurly's still around ?
'topic's with two rows of whole hazelnuts on the top.
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Victory 'V's
I bought some recently in a little ye olde sweet shoppe in the Cotswolds.
Tone
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Originally posted by EternalOptimist View PostNot sure where it came from, it was either bark, or a woody root
we called it sticky lice
and other sweets of nostalgia
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Originally posted by EternalOptimist View Poststicky lice
from the end of the war. bark from the liquorice tree or something similar. woody sticks that tasted stronly of aniseed
and feck me, these search engines are making it hard to find out about stuff. That WIki entry came 14th after a load of Yanks trying on Whip Your Credit Card Out Now tactics on me.
Obligatory Google doesn't give a monkeys about your privacy link
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Originally posted by pacharan View PostSweeties from yesteryear.
Answer:
There were quite a few different sweets in Victorian times from "fruit pips" to "rhubarb and custards", some sweets were actually deadly.
Things were tough when I were a lad...
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostOr for the poor, a bunch of sticks kept in a bag with an aniseed ball for a week?
we called it sticky lice
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sticky lice
from the end of the war. bark from the liquorice tree or something similar. woody sticks that tasted stronly of aniseed
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Originally posted by Dallas View Post
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wow, yeah all three OP sweets are fond memories.
I love aniseed balls with the seeds, 5 at a time was for hard men.
Another fond memory for me were FIREBALLs, big nasty burning gobstoppers - you can get imitations now, but they are toned down, probably for health and safety (I genuinely knew a lad who sucked that many in an hour that he got blisters on his tounge)
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