Fruit Roll up vs Fruit by the Foot

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  2. Food
  3. Snack Battle #1 Fruit Rollups vs Gushers vs Fruit By The Foot

PackersXLV 7 years ago#1

What do you choose - Results (32 votes)

Fruit Rollups

28.13% (9 votes)

9

Gushers

43.75% (14 votes)

14

Fruit By The Foot

28.13% (9 votes)

9

This poll is now closed.

I love me some fruit by the foot especially the tie dye ones.

seven_ate_9 7 years ago#2

+1 fresh fruit

(OO=[][]=OO)

Clergybones 7 years ago#3

fruit roll ups

VinhGFQ - 3178095352

PackersXLV (Topic Creator)7 years ago#4

Clergybones posted...

fruit roll ups

You didn't vote for it

PackersXLV (Topic Creator)7 years ago#5

seven ate 9 posted...

+1 fresh fruit

Well obviously but if I put that in it would get no votes or very little.

CorduroyBear 7 years ago#6

Gushers for me

4 8 15 16 23 42

TheDarkCircle 7 years ago#7

seven ate 9 posted...

+1 fresh fruit

Agreed.

Though of the three listed I'd say fruit roll up. But I don't believe I've eaten any of these in like 15 years.

Socarrat 7 years ago#8

PackersXLV posted...

seven ate 9 posted...
+1 fresh fruit

Well obviously but if I put that in it would get no votes or very little.

Fruit leather that you make on a sheet pan. Na, I'll quit playing. Fruit roll ups where you can pop little pixar character imprints out.

EvVv3 7 years ago#9

damn this is hard

fruit by the foot is last for sure

but i like the goey middle of gushers but the tastiness of fruit roll up

thesticker 7 years ago#10

Fruit rollups are bogus

Fruit by the foot is nothing without its (s***ty) gimmick

I can literally feel my teeth rotting away when I eat gushers

  1. Boards
  2. Food
  3. Snack Battle #1 Fruit Rollups vs Gushers vs Fruit By The Foot

To the delight of kids (and adults who have a major sweet tooth), Fruit Roll-Ups have been around since the early 1980s. Part of General Mills' Betty Crocker brand, Fruit Roll-Ups are one of the brand’s several fruit snack products, but, as you may have suspected, they don't count toward your four to five servings of fruit per day. Read on for nine fun, fruity facts about Fruit Roll-Ups.

In 1975, General Mills began researching ways to make a fun, sweet fruit treat. The research and development team based the new product on fruit leather, and when Fruit Roll-Ups hit grocery store shelves in 1983, customers could choose between strawberry, apple, cherry, and apricot varieties.

The main fruit component for Fruit Roll-Ups might get the most notice, but another company inventor contributed the essential non-edible packaging of the snack. Bob Zoss, an inventor at General Mills, created Fruit Roll-Ups’ nonstick backing, which allows kids to easily pull apart the flat sheet of fruit snack from its cellophane backing. During his nearly 40 years at General Mills, Zoss filed five patents, set 58 invention records, and worked on everything from sodium reduction research to quality control in food packaging.

Because Fruit Roll-Ups are inherently similar to Fruit by the Foot, another Betty Crocker fruit snack, confusion between the two has abounded. Both snacks are sugary, come in bright colors, appeal to kids, and come rolled. Although people debate in online forums and comment sections about the merits of Fruit Roll-Ups versus Fruit by the Foot, many commenters state that they mistakenly always thought the two snacks were the same.

Kids' food have a long history of including toys or games to pique interest, and Fruit Roll-Ups are no different. Besides offering a variety of flavors and pre-cut shapes to punch out of the roll, in the early 2000s, some Fruit Roll-Ups added edible dye that could be pressed onto the tongue, giving kids cool temporary tongue tattoos. The marketing trick worked. As one 6th grader in Oregon said, "The greatest snack ever invented is Fruit Roll-Ups because there are tongue tattoos that are out of this world."

A consumer watchdog nonprofit, the Center for Science in the Public Interest, recently sued General Mills, claiming that Fruit Roll-Ups' packaging intentionally misled customers into believing that the snack was healthy and made of fruit. In particular, the strawberry flavor of Fruit Roll-Ups contains no actual strawberries—it’s flavored with pear juice concentrate instead—but the box showed an image of a strawberry. In 2012, General Mills agreed to remove images of fruit from Fruit Roll-Ups boxes that didn’t contain the actual fruit.

Dentists specifically call out Fruit Roll-Ups as being particularly bad for teeth. Because many people think dried fruits and various fruit-flavored snacks are healthier than candy, they don’t realize just how much sugar the fruit products contain. Besides the possibility of eroding enamel from being stuck on the teeth for too long, the chewiness and stickiness of Fruit Roll-Ups can also potentially pull out fillings.

If you run out of Fruit Roll-Ups or love them so much that you want to try your hand at making your own homemade version, you’re in luck. Chop up your favorite fruit (it can be fresh, frozen, or out of a can), add a sweetener such as sugar or honey, and puree it in a food processor. Spread the puree on a baking sheet and dry the fruit mixture by cooking it in your oven for 6 to 8 hours at 150°F. Slice into strips or blocks with a pizza cutter, and if you wrap it in plastic or parchment paper, you’ll have your own homemade fruit roll-ups.

On a 2000 episode of Friends, Chandler tried to avoid a relationship conversation with Monica by asking for a Fruit Roll-Up. Guess even manchildren need afternoon snacks.

thanks fruit snacks for the best gift ever: a life-size jersey made of fruit roll up. I would eat it if it wasnt framed pic.twitter.com/UIJH6cTs

— Jeremy Lin (@JLin7) May 3, 2012

In 2012, General Mills gave Jeremy Lin, a former member of the New York Knicks, a special jersey made entirely of Fruit Roll-Ups. Full "Linsanity" had broken out after Lin, a point guard, led the Knicks to a number of wins. When the newly crowned superstar tweeted about loving fruit snacks, Fruit Roll-Ups responded in kind by making the colorful jersey as well as sending along a gift basket of fruit snacks.

Are Fruit Roll

Aside from shape and flavor, the formulas used to make Fruit by the Foot, Gushers, and Fruit Roll-Ups are essentially the same. The actual size can vary slightly, but on average, each Fruit by the Foot is just about three feet long.

Does Fruit by the Foot have real fruit?

Naturally flavored. Made with real fruit (These fruit-flavored snacks are made with pear concentrate.

Is Fruit by the Foot good for you?

This fruity favorite's box says these roll-ups are an excellent source of vitamin C and low in fat. The nutrition label, however, reveals that added sugar is high — 48% of one roll-up by weight. Better choice: Real fruit beats processed fruit every time.

Did they stop making Fruit by the Foot?

Fruit by the Foot is a fruit snack made by General Mills and distributed under the Betty Crocker brand. It was introduced in 1992 in North America. It is still in production.