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    • Alice Wright
    • The Finger. No, I am not making this up. There was a lolly in the shape of a red hand with a pointing finger. Yes you used to suck on the finger and make rude gestures with it.
    • Dracula. Again another ‘resurrected’ lolly, but the modern version has lost its teeth. Dracula in my day used to be red and black in the shape of the vampire himself and full of some type of goo.
    • Zoom. Always good for an impromptu space fight scenario. Zooms were rarely eaten before they had flown through a few galaxies first. You can still buy the Rocket Lolly but not in the same cool packets.
    • Choc Ice. This is what your parents would ask for. Or possibly a Mivvi if they were being daring. Whatever.
  1. Sep 3, 2014 · British Ice-Lollies And Ice-Creams 1960-1990 - Flashbak. Anorak September 3, 2014. Post Views: 73,304. 1960s 1970s 1980s Food Shopping UK.

  2. “The market has changed dramatically during that period,” Roland relates, “in the 60s and 70s the market was predominantly served by mobilers or ice cream vans as the public would call them. Local Authority legislation around licensing for selling ice cream on streets and the introduction of employment tax had a detrimental impact on the mobiling sector with a vast reduction in the ...

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    • Mary O'brien
    • Klondike Choco Taco. The list kicks off with a rhyming favorite that delighted ice cream truck patrons and bodega customers across the United States for nearly 40 years.
    • Popsicle Bubble Gum Swirl. Bubble gum may be a controversial flavor, but for a time, Bubble Gum Swirl ice pops (sometimes also called "Cotton Candy Swirl") were a treasured must that ice cream vendors made sure to keep stocked when making their summer afternoon trips around the neighborhood.
    • Baskin Robbins Apple Pie A La Mode. While a version of this delightfully homey ice cream flavor was originally invented in 1976, the one that Baskin Robbins lovers remember with fondness was reintroduced in 2006.
    • Blue Bunny Red Carpet Red Velvet Cake. Imagine a red velvet cake flavored ice cream swirled with cream cheese frosting flavored ice cream, all scattered with chunks of real red velvet cake throughout.
  3. Jul 28, 2006 · When I was a boy in the 1970s, a 99 Flake was a double cone filled with soft ice cream and a half Flake inserted into each. The 99 was the double cone, and the Flake the chocolate insertion - two components of a grand ice cream ensemble capable of satisfying the appetite of the greediest six-year-old. And it cost 15p. Douglas Bulloch, London

  4. Oct 22, 2020 · There was so much choice, from fruit lollies to ice-creams that would end up all over our hands and faces. One of our favourites was the Fab ice lolly, which – unbelievably – turns 50 this year. So to mark the occasion, we’ve taken a trip down memory lane to recall some of the other iconic ices that provided the taste of our childhood ...

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  6. May 6, 2021 · BC (before the cone) Whilst its official year of invention is claimed to be 1904, people had been eating ice cream from a variety of coneshaped containers for decades before that. However, the containers themselves weren’t edible. Historical archives show street vendors in the 19th century selling “penny licks” - cone-shaped glasses ...

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