Check out these STARBURST Minis Sours. They're just like the STARBURST candy you know and love only smaller, unwrapped, and sour in a variety of great-tasting fruit flavors like cherry, blue raspberry, watermelon, and strawberry.
Experience the unexpectedly juicy burst of bold fruit flavor inside STARBURST Sours Gummies Candy. This fruity candy features cherry, strawberry, blue raspberry and watermelon flavors in perfectly gummy bite-size pieces.
This product was sadly discontinued in the early 2010s and since then supply has evaporated to where the product is effectively extinct.
Mars Wrigley has confirmed it has made the “difficult decision” to discontinue its Starburst brand from the Australian market. The iconic lolly brand was removed from Australia in June because of rising production costs, much to the consternation of fans of the fruit-flavoured chew Starburst.
Starburst Sour came out in 2006 and introduced the Sour Cherry candy.
Candy lovers everywhere have long bemoaned the fact that red and pink Starburst, while undeniably the most delicious, are often the rarest flavors found in packs of the candy.
“Our STARBURST® products are imported from Europe and like many businesses that are importing products from overseas, the brand has been exposed to supply chain difficulties and rising cost pressures over the last two years.”
Jelly sweets containing a gelling agent called konjac are banned in the European Union, Australia and numerous other countries, as their texture is thought to make them a choking hazard, especially for children. The most commonly banned konjac-containing products are miniature jelly cups with peel-off lids.
Confectionery giant Mars Wrigley has discontinued the Starburst brand in Australia. The move means the brand's iconic chews, snakes and babies will no longer be stocked. The news came after TikTok creator Nariman Dein uploaded a video expressing her frustration at being unable to find the lollies.
“I think it's a giant conspiracy, to demand more money from companies for their shelf space.” Dr Michael Callaghan, a marketing expert at Deakin University, said the move was likely an effort for supermarkets to maximise profit from shelf space. “Everything on the supermarket shelves costs money,” he said.
Over a dozen products were recalled in all: Starburst Gummies Original Share Size 3.5oz, Starburst Gummies Original Peg Pack 5.8oz, Starburst Gummies Sours Share Size 3.5oz, Starburst Gummies Sours Peg Pack 5.8oz, Starburst Gummies Sour Berries Peg Pack 5.8oz, Life Savers Gummies Five Flavor Peg Pack 7.0oz and 3.22oz, ...
These were Skittles with sweet and sour flavors. The flavor was discontinued in 2019.
Made to celebrate the other side of sweet, Sour SKITTLES candy offers a tangy twist on our Original mix and includes sour strawberry, sour green apple, sour lemon, sour orange and sour grape flavors.
With STARBURST Original Fruit Chew Candy, there are endless ways to add a burst of unexplainably juicy flavor every day. This stand up pouch includes all the STARBURST Original Candy fruit flavors you love: strawberry, cherry, orange, and lemon.
Minties (1922) were invented in 1922 by James Noble Stedman (1860–1944), son of Stedman-Henderson Sweets company founder (and Australia's first confectioner) James Stedman (1840–1913).
Fantales. Though Fantales are relatively simple treats – chocolate cubes filled with gooey caramel – they're apparently the most iconic Australian lolly of all time.
The official OREO Australia & New Zealand page with all your playful moments from your favourite black & white cookie.
Scampi Fries, Frazzles and tomato soup also emerged among a list of goods those who have left our shores cannot live without. According to figures released by British Corner Shop, Brits who now live in Australia are rushing to cram their cupboards with Shreddies and oxtail soup.
What foodstuffs can I not take into Australia? Foods that are prohibited unless accompanied by a valid Import Permit include beans, peas, cereal seeds, eggs, fresh fruit and vegetables, uncanned meat and all pork products, milk, popping corn, raw unroasted nuts, whole salmon and trout.
Have you noticed the absence of Starburst lollies on supermarket shelves? We've got bad news; the empty shelves spell the end of an era. Mars Wrigley (which manufactures Starburst) has confirmed the iconic brand has been discounted indefinitely Down Under.
The original flavours are now branded "Original Fruits", and Starburst now comes in several assortments: FaveREDs, Limited Edition Retro Fruits, Tropical, Baja California, Sour, Strawberry Mix, Berries and Creme, Very Berry and Fruity Slushies.
The lawsuit, filed in a California federal court in July of 2020, alleges that ads and packaging for Starburst Original, FaveReds, and Tropical varieties all made misleading claims of containing “real fruit juice,” with Starburst claiming that 50% of the flavor of its Original variety comes from real fruit juice.