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Haribo Gummi Candy, Happy-Cola, 5-Pound Bag | 
enlarge | Brand: Haribo Category: Gourmet
List Price: $19.20 Buy New: $14.49 You Save: $4.71 (25%)
New (2) from $14.49
Rating: 49 reviews Sales Rank: 572
Country: HUNGARY Ingredients: Corn Syrup, Sugar, Gelatin, Dextrose, Citric Acid, Caramel Syrup, Starch, Artificial and Natural Flavors, Fractionated Coconut Oil, Carnauba Wax, Beeswax Coating. Media: Grocery Number Of Items: 1 Size: 5 POUND BAG Shipping Weight (lbs): 5 Dimensions (in): 9.4 x 7.1 x 3.8
UPC: 042238323421 EAN: 0042238323438 ASIN: B000EVMNMI
Release Date: March 6, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | One 5-pound bag containing approximately 730 pieces | | • | Cola-flavored candy | | • | Fat free | | • | Shaped like bottles | | • | An international favorite |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Haribo Happy-Cola gummi bottles look like real soda pop bottles and have a real cola flavor. Attractive two-toned color. Packed in one 5 pound bag. About the Brand Haribo, founded in 1920 in Bonn, Germany by Hans Riegel, is one of the most prominent manufacturers of sweets (namely fruit gums, licorice, and foam) in the world. The company name is an acronym for "Hans Riegel, Bonn" and stands as a reminder of Haribo's continuing loyalty to early traditions. After Hans Riegel died during World War II, his son, also named Hans Riegel, took over the factory and expanded its operations, taking over many local confectionery manufacturers in countries all over the world. Currently, Haribo operates five factories in Germany and 13 throughout the rest of Europe. The company also has sales offices in almost every country in Europe as well as in the Unites States. Haribo's German catch phrase is "Haribo macht kinder froh / und Erwachsene ebenso," which translates as "Kids and grown-ups love it so / the happy world of Haribo."
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| Customer Reviews: Read 44 more reviews...
Fast and delious January 7, 2009 D. Thrift I got my gummies promptly and I am enjoying every bite of them. The bag was bigger than I thought it would be, but thats a good thing.
Cola Gummy December 20, 2008 Xiu H. Leung It was very nice. Package was big, came a day early. Highly recommeneded.
A little bit goes a long way December 3, 2008 J. D. Romo (San Antonio, TX USA) Just a note: this is a LOT of candy. If you are ordering this make sure you have a lot of friends and family that will help you finish off the bag. After the first handful (which is excellent, mind you) I was set for a few days. Apparently no one else in the house cares for gummy candy and it took me a few weeks to finish up the candy. Other than that, they taste good (although not entirely like cola) and have a good consistency.
Just like I remember as a kid November 25, 2008 C. Fredericks (Washington, DC) These are awesome. I love cola bottle gummi candy and Haribo are the best. These bring back so many fond memories of my childhood. Mmmm. . . .
So small...couldn't hurt to eat just a few...so very small... November 19, 2008 Kerry T. Givens (Lancaster, PA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
So here's how it went down. My teenage sons crowd around with innocent curiosity as I take the mammoth 5-pound bag out of the cardboard box, the box with the beguiling Amazon smile on the side. That knowing, wicked Cheshire grin. Within seconds the bag is neatly cut open. An oddly hypnotic aroma wafts out. It begins. We all sample one or two of the pleasantly rubbery candies, but find ourselves exchanging the same puzzled expression: that flavor---not really cola...vaguely medicinal, yet not offensive. Hmm. Further testing is required. We all sit down. Sampling continues now in earnest---they're so small! Where's the harm?---and we agree that you need to eat quite a few to identify the flavor with any accuracy. Not a name brand cola, to be sure...one of those "store brands," after it's gone flat. We notice that after the first 50 or so, the flavor seems to change somewhat, perhaps because all our teeth are now caked with adherent masses of gummy residue. Our mood is high, so testing continues. General consensus is reached after the first pound or two that the bottles in the middle of the mass are softer and more fragrant than the stuff from the top of the bag. The bag is passed around, sniffing ensues. Great effort is expended seeing how far a bottle can be stretched, while held between the front teeth, until it breaks. The unmistakable signs of hyperglycemia ---exhilaration, rapid speech, a cola-like aroma on the breath---go somewhat unnoticed as we burrow deeper into the jiggly wad of gummies. Dinner is postponed along with homework. A telephone call from my ex-wife goes unanswered. The scientific process cannot be interrupted. Would Fermi have taken time out from inventing the x-ray deathgun to take a call from his ex-wife? Please. The fun almost stops when a bottle goes up a nostril ---kids!--- but everything is soon back on track when we discover that moistened bottles can be stuck to the forehead for minutes at a time. Soon my sons' faces bristle with the things. A joke is made about "edible lesions". Hilarity ensues. Photos are taken. Outside it grows dark while leaves blow about, unraked. The scratching of a pet at the door stopped some time ago. Bottles are eaten ten at a time now. Cola-stained spittle dribbles down a chin. No time to wipe. Got to keep chewing. The are SO VERY SMALL. Suddenly the bag is empty. Empty. The room goes quiet. The box is re-examined, but no stray gummies are found. The box with the grin. That damn, mocking grin. I have to explain to the children why I only ordered one 5-pound bag. We all feel somewhat sick. We are all trembling now. Parents, sometimes single dads cannot be trusted to make good judgments about their kids' eating habits. Living with the stress of alimony can pervert that part of the mind which regulates dietary choices, or common sense. I hope this will serve as a valuable object lesson for you all.
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