Limited Edition KitKat
#1
Posted 15 August 2002 - 08:02 AM
I have eight bars now chilling in my refrigerator (was a little melty due to the 98 degree weather here in manhattan!)... has anyone tried them?
I'm very excited... I love new versions of candy
#2
Posted 15 August 2002 - 02:16 PM
I don't know how they taste, not being a white chocolate fan.
#3
Posted 15 August 2002 - 09:40 PM
Yes, please! Are they real white chocolate with cocoa butter or "white coating"? I hope they show up here on the west coast.
#4
Posted 15 August 2002 - 10:30 PM
#5
Posted 16 August 2002 - 10:18 AM
But no, I don't think they are the British version... they really do say "limited edition".
When I go home today, I'll take a look at the ingredients and post back.
#6
Posted 16 August 2002 - 03:18 PM
Author, Hungry Monkey, coming in May
#7
Posted 16 August 2002 - 06:26 PM
Okay, I pulled a dark chocolate one from the freezer early. It is a noticeable improvement over the normal ones.
#8
Posted 18 August 2002 - 06:49 PM
#9
Posted 17 September 2002 - 02:14 PM
#10
Posted 17 September 2002 - 03:01 PM
Kristin Wagner, aka "torakris"
Manager, Membership
kwagner@egstaff.org
#11
Posted 17 September 2002 - 03:10 PM
#12
Posted 17 September 2002 - 08:55 PM
.....does anyone remember a candy bar (Nestle, maybe?) made about 30 years ago called a "Triple-Decker Bar"? It was 3 layers, one each of dark, white, and milk chocolate (respectively, from the bottom up). As I recall they weren't around all that long, but I sure loved 'em as an 11-year-old!
#13
Posted 18 September 2002 - 04:20 PM
Cookbook Specialist and Consultant
amsterjudy@gmail.com
#14
Posted 18 September 2002 - 04:30 PM
"The MILKY WAY® Dark Bar used to be called FOREVER YOURS® Bar back in 1936 and was discontinued in 1979. However, due to popular demand the FOREVER YOURS® Bar was reintroduced in 1989 and was named MILKY WAY® Dark Bar. Based on consumer studies we found out that the chocolate in MILKY WAY® Dark was not what people would think of as dark chocolate and we wanted to reposition the bar to appeal to a broader audience so it was renamed MILKY WAY® Midnight in 2000 and is what you see on the shelves today. The bar still retains its bold, rich chocolate, fluffy nougat and the best caramel ever, the change was only in the name."
I only ask because the candy that Eric_Malson mentioned sounds good, but I couldn't find any mention of a "Triple Decker Bar" using Google, even on the discontinued candy lists.
#15
Posted 18 September 2002 - 04:51 PM
Cookbook Specialist and Consultant
amsterjudy@gmail.com
#16
Posted 18 September 2002 - 05:22 PM
that is so wrong. It's just so....wrong.I don't like white chocolate, but I had a dark chocolate Kit Kat and liked it; it was as much better than the regular Kit Kat as the Milky Way Midnight is than the regular Milky Way.
#17
Posted 18 September 2002 - 06:14 PM
Dark chocolate is so much better. Unfortunately, marketeers think Americans like milk chocolate better because it outsells dark. If you look at the cheap candy bars out there, there are so few that even pretend to be dark - Junior Mints, Milky Way Midnight, Special Dark, Mounds, Dove Dark, any I've missed (basides Bounty Dark - really a UK bar version of Mounds sometimes seen on the West Coast)? If the choices were similar, I think the market for dark would go way up. But then, so would my weight. So eat your bad milk chocolate and I'll stay with splurges at the finer confectioners.
#18
Posted 18 September 2002 - 07:50 PM
It was a darn good bar--just the three layers of different-colored chocolate (sort of like a pousse-cafe!), no filling. I somehow never thought to Google it....I can't be the only one that remembers these, and I'm sure of the name. But I do remember they weren't around long--a year or two at the most sometime around 1970.
#19
Posted 18 September 2002 - 08:00 PM
Oops - sorry! I should have gone back farther in the thread and got my story straight. Just so we're clear:Nightscot, my answer was to ilfaith about the dark Milky Way. Thanks for finding the real poop. 1979 sounds just right. Mamster was born in 1975 and I had a lot of these on our "fresh air for baby, candy for Mom" walks.
Dark Milky Way - a good thing.
Triple Decker Bar - sounds good, I want to learn more.
Dark or white Kit Kat - I'm dying to try these, wish I could find them in a local store.
By the way (to recomplicate things), my favorite discontinued candy was the seven-up bar: seven different sections, each with it's own different filling, all covered in chocolate. Like a whole box of chocolates in a handy bar form!
#20
Posted 18 September 2002 - 08:41 PM
Cookbook Specialist and Consultant
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#21
Posted 18 September 2002 - 09:52 PM
http://www.oldtimecandy.com/skybar.htm
Lot's of other old, hard to find stuff at the same site.
And I definitely want to take a look at that book - thanks
#22
Posted 19 September 2002 - 12:12 AM
Cookbook Specialist and Consultant
amsterjudy@gmail.com
#23
Posted 19 September 2002 - 07:07 PM
Remember?
#24
Posted 19 September 2002 - 08:45 PM
You can still get them at the Candyland's on 8th and 7th Streets in minneapolis. As well as the freshest gummie bears around. I won't even mention the hand-made to-die-for cashew "turtles." They are the size of a saucer. They make a mighty fine lunch.Here's a treat that's extinct: those wax bottles of syrupy colored liquid that came in teeny tiny exquisite 6-packs for a dime! You 'd bite the little "bottle cap" off, swig the syrup, then chew on the bottle til it became disgusting...then you took it out of your mouth and molded it into something cool, like a dog or rabbit or something. The you stuck it to the curb and forgot about it!
Remember?
#25
Posted 19 September 2002 - 10:45 PM
These are also available from the oldtimecandy.com link above. Along with wax lips and other weird old stuff.You can still get them at the Candyland's on 8th and 7th Streets in minneapolis. As well as the freshest gummie bears around. I won't even mention the hand-made to-die-for cashew "turtles." They are the size of a saucer. They make a mighty fine lunch.Here's a treat that's extinct: those wax bottles of syrupy colored liquid that came in teeny tiny exquisite 6-packs for a dime! You 'd bite the little "bottle cap" off, swig the syrup, then chew on the bottle til it became disgusting...then you took it out of your mouth and molded it into something cool, like a dog or rabbit or something. The you stuck it to the curb and forgot about it!
Remember?
#26
Posted 20 November 2002 - 11:23 AM
#27
Posted 20 November 2002 - 11:36 AM
Freeze 'em...they kick ass frozen.Dark and white chocolate limited edition Kit Kats - now available in Seattle - on display at Bartell's Drugs.
The dark choc that is - - don't care for the white choc, since it's not choc.
#28
Posted 20 November 2002 - 02:53 PM
Yes!!! Can I ask which Bartell's you saw them at? As soon as I post this I'm running up to Broadway to check.Dark and white chocolate limited edition Kit Kats - now available in Seattle - on display at Bartell's Drugs.
I did have a white chocolate "Big Kat" Kit Kat that MsRamsey brought back from England (thanks
Nooooo!! The Broadway Bartell had nothing - they suck
Edited by nightscotsman, 20 November 2002 - 03:31 PM.
#29
Posted 20 November 2002 - 03:46 PM
Oh NSM,Can I ask which Bartell's you saw them at?
I bought one today at the downtown Bartell's - next to Gelatimo (so, why did I buy one, one might ask?) on Third, north of Union.
#30
Posted 20 November 2002 - 03:57 PM
I have a couple darks and a white in the freeze at home...I'll have one tonight in your honor after work.I'm beginning to think this whole thing is a just a cruel joke and they don't actually exist.
Them darks is pretty good.









