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Smarties (Nestlé)

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Nestlé Smarties
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Nestlé Smarties

For the U.S. candies called Smarties, see Smarties (Ce De Candy)
Nestlé Smarties are a colourful sugar-coated chocolate confectionery popular in Australia, Austria, Canada, France, Germany, Ireland, South Africa, the United Kingdom, and other countries. They are similar to M&M's produced by Mars.

They are distributed in the United States, where another confectionery uses the "Smarties" name, only by specialist importers, and under the name "Jolly Smart Alecs".

Smarties are oblate spheroids with a minor axis of about 5 mm and a major axis of about 15 mm. They come in eight colours: red, orange, yellow, green, mauve (or purple), pink, brown and blue. The orange Smarties are distinguished by containing orange-flavoured chocolate in the UK market only.

General Facts

Smarties were introduced in 1937 as "Chocolate Niblet Beans" by Rowntree's of York and renamed as Smarties in the following year. They became known as "Nestlé Smarties" in 1993, five years after the company Rowntree Mackintosh was acquired by Nestlé. Smarties are still manufactured in York.

In the original range of colours, there was a light-brown Smartie. This was replaced in 1989 with the blue Smartie. Before 1958, the dark-brown Smarties had a plain-chocolate centre, while the light-brown one tasted of coffee. In 1997, larger-sized Giant Smarties were introduced, and, in 2004, Fruity Smarties.

In 2006 it was announced that Nestle were removing all artificial colours from Smarties, owing to consumer concerns over chemical dyes producing hyperactivity in young children. Various theories have circulated concerning which colours were better or worse for you. In answer to this controversy, Nestle decided to replace all chemical dyes with natural ones. As they were unable to source a natural blue dye, blue Smarties were replaced with white. If a natural dye can be found, blue may be reinstated.

Nestlé uses cochineal, a derivative of the Cochineal beetle, to dye red Smarties, [link] and are therefore not kosher or vegetarian.

In 2005, 570,000 tubes of Smarties were being manufactured each day, with an average of 48 to a tube. In the UK, an average of 307 tubes are consumed every minute.

Smarties in the UK were traditionally sold in cardboard tubes, capped with a colourful lid usually having a letter of the alphabet on it. Over the last 25 years, Nestle has manufactured five billion Smarties lids. Some lids are very rare and are now regarded as collectors' items. Sales of Smarties are worth £73 million each year.

In February 2005, it was announced that the traditional cylindrical tube was to be replaced with a new six-sided "Hexatube" packaging in the summer. Nestlé have stated that the redesign is in order to keep the brand interesting and fresh to children; the new packaging is also lighter and more compact. The last 100 tubes to leave the factory in York have a certificate inside them.

Current Colours

Retired Colours

Trivia

Advertising slogans

The current Smarties slogan is "Only Smarties have the answer", used since the early 1980s; however, the previous slogan, "Do you eat the red ones last?", has still been used afterwards. In the 1950s and 1960s, the phrase "Buy some for Lulu" was sung schoolyard-style (i.e. in the fashion of nyah-nah-nah nah-nah) as a tagline in commercials. This was before the rise of the singer Lulu.

Mid-1980s television commercials for Smarties were notable for their advanced use of computer-generated imagery, produced by the advertising agency Lambie-Nairn. [link]

See also

External links

 


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