10 strangest candies in the world

Anonim

10 strangest candies in the world 15893_1

It is difficult to argue with the fact that candy love all over the world. Of course, there are no ideal candies, because how many people, so many tastes. There are varieties of this sweet delicacy, which most people may seem very strange or even disgusting, but people in some cultures really love them. So, today it will be about some of the strangest candies in the world.

1 caramel with lamb taste

The Hokkaido "Genghis Khan" ("Genghis Khan") is a local fried lamb dish. Traditionally, the dish is prepared in the cast iron recruitance (saucepan). The lamb meat is roasting on fat surrounded by thinly sliced ​​vegetables (bean sprouts, cabbage and pumpkin). It seems to be tasty, but is it so good this delicacy will be in the form of candy. In 2002, the owner of Sapporo Gourmet Foods developed caramel candy Genghis Khan. Initially, he tried to sell the product in the form of a sauce, but did not like the customers a novelty. As a result, the product was renamed, after which it began to sell as flavored delicacy. Candy, having a lamb taste, seasoned curry with a notch of sweets, are sold in boxes of 18 pieces (each thing in an individual wrapper).

2 Salsagi.

The word "Salsageti" may seem like a funny variety of traditional spaghetti, but in fact it is a Mexican candy cooked from spicy straws. Unlike ordinary spaghetti, Salsageti sweet sour, and they need to eat. These long tubular chewing candies with a watermelon taste, covered with chili and tamarind powder and sugar crystals, and candy sold with Sauce bag from Tamarind, to which they need to be worn. And if you pour candies from the packaging and pour them on top of this sauce, then there will be no difference from spaghetti and you will not find at all. This delicacy is popular in Mexico, but it can be found in other countries (especially it is in demand at all parties). Who would have thought that in many countries a hit will be spicy candy with a watermelon taste, resembling spaghetti.

3 Chocolate Languages ​​Kittens

Considering that the name of the popular Czech candy Kocici Jazycky is literally translated as "cats" languages, for many it may sound like some horror. Surely, now everyone is going to everyone, pink and wet candies ... In fact, it's just sweet milk chocolate bars in the form of a kitten. Similar chocolate bars in the form of a kitten were first made in 1892 in Vienna. They acquired the greatest popularity in the 1920s and 1930s in the Czech Republic. On the candy box, soft and fluffy kittens are depicted next to chocolate bars in the form of their tongues. Cute but strange.

4 Botanical Rice Candies

Some love there are candy, but they are too lazy to take them out of the wrapper. Botan Rice Candy was created specifically so that it can be with a wrap. This is a soft chewing candy with lemon / orange taste, wrapped in edible rice paper. It is worth noting that although wrapper and edible, it does not have taste, unlike its "filling". Also, to more interest the children, in boxes with these candies you can find cartoon stickers.

5 chocolate with cheese and onion chips

Tayto is an Irish company producing chips and other snacks since 1956. The company is proud that each fifth packaging of chips in Northern Ireland is Tayto Cheese & Onion. However, a few years ago, Tayto decided to "give" a new yummy to the world - Tayto milk chocolate tile with chips from cheese and onions. The delicacy was released limited edition and received mainly negative reviews. However, for those who would like to try such an unusual delicacy himself, there are bad news - chocolates really released very limited edition and just once, and they literally dare from the counters.

6 Musky sticks

What looks like a gum from toothpaste and smell like perfume ... Of course, musky sticks. This strange candy, loved by many Australians and New Zealanders, is disgusting in the rest of the world. Musky sticks are pink cylinders from gelatin and sugar powder with a musky essence, which slowly dissolve in the mouth, leaving a strong aftertaste of cologne. One Australian Baker wrote in his blog about a woman who described the taste of this candy as "the aroma of the old women at the bus stop, but still quite pleasant." It is strange, but such sweets love in Australia for a whole century. Only Woolworths sells about 24 million musky sticks per year.

7 Sweet Corn Candy

Corn, as you know, eat in different ways, and one of the recipes is corn with cream. Victory Creamy Corn Candy is clearly not one of the popular ways to enjoy corn. Slogan on the packaging of these candy says: "Extremely attractive and rich taste", but it is unlikely that anyone will say that candies have the same taste as corn with cream. Strange candy from Malaysia can boast so much sustainable taste that he envies any mint chewing gum.

8 Piggy Perse

The British company Marks & Spencer has released PERCY PIG sticky chewing candies that are made of pork and gelatin. Despite its strange composition, they found a lot of fans, therefore there were already a lot of varieties of "sweet piglets" with other flavors and tastes, including Veggie Percy, Phizzy Pig Tails, Percy Pig and Pals and Globetrotting Percy.

9 Salted Lacricians

Not all candy should be sweet. People in some parts of Northern Europe love salmiaccia or salty black liquoritsa (licorice). The sharp and sour taste of salt licorice is familiar to many children in Finland, Scandinavia and the Netherlands. Salted licorice is sold both in solid and in a soft form, and it is often used as an aroma for things such as ice cream, soda and liqueurs. There are many varieties of this delicacy,

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