Abba-Zaba
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Abba-Zaba is a taffy candy bar with peanut butter center, made by the Annabelle Candy Company in Hayward, California.
According to the Candy Wrapper Museum, the first Abba Zaba bars were manufactured beginning in 1922 by Colby and McDermott.[1] Before Annabelle Candy Co. started manufacturing Abba-Zaba, the packaging featured racially insensitive imagery.[2] Annabelle Candy Co. will only say that the wrapper has been the same for as long as they have manufactured the candy.
The bar was later manufactured by the Cardinet Candy Co. along with U-No Bar. Annabelle Candy Purchased the Cardinet Candy Co. in 1978. Annabelle now manufactures both candy bars in addition to others.
Abba-Zaba bars can be found almost exclusively west of the Rockies.[citation needed] The wrapper features a yellow and black checkerboard "taxi" pattern. They can be purchased in bulk on the web. They can also be found in candy specialty stores anywhere in the US and Canada.[citation needed]
Recently Annabelle has produced a new Abba-Zaba that has an apple flavored taffy.[citation needed] There is also a new bar that contains chocolate spread instead of peanut butter.[citation needed]
Abba-Zaba bars are kosher pareve.[citation needed]
In popular culture[]
This section needs additional citations for verification. (February 2019) |
It is unclear whether any of the following popular culture mentions were paid product placements.
Music
- 1960s: The bar was a favorite of rock musician Don Van Vliet, who is best known by his stage name Captain Beefheart. He used the bar's name as a song title on his album Safe as Milk in 1967. Artwork on the rear album sleeve also features a black and yellow checkerboard pattern inspired by the Abba-Zaba wrapper.
- 1970s: Abba-Zaba bars are also referenced on a vinyl album titled "A Child's Garden Of Grass" in the early 1970s.
- 1990s: Abba-Zaba is also mentioned the 1999 song "Chocolate Jesus" by Tom Waits.
Television/Series/Streaming
- 1970s: On the American satirical soap opera Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman, the character played by Louise Lasser offers her "Survival Training and Existence Therapy -- STET" mentor an Abba-Zaba in episode 74, which aired on April 15, 1976.[3]
- 1990s: In the 1992 Salute Your Shorts episode "Telly and the Tennis Match," Telly tries to buy a new tennis racket with her camp store account money, but finds out there is not enough because she spent most of the money on Abba-Zabas over the course of the summer. Ug suggests she join Abba-Zabas Anonymous.
- 1990s: In 1993, an Abba-Zaba comes out of a vending machine in episode 11 of Saved by the Bell: The College Years
- 1990s: In a 1995 episode of Married... with Children, Al buys Peggy a diamond necklace for their 25th wedding anniversary and hides it underneath a couch cushion; when he shows the necklace to Kelly and Bud (not realizing that their dog, Buck, had mistaken the jewelry box for a bone and buried it), Bud points out that Al is actually holding up an old, half-eaten Abba-Zaba.
- 2000s: In the 2005 Gilmore Girls season 5 episode "But I'm A Gilmore," Kirk attributes his candy hangover to Abba Zabas.
- 2000s: In the 2009 Two and a Half Men episode "Warning, It's Dirty", Evelyn offers her client Marty Pepper an Abba-Zaba.
- 2010s: At the end of the 2010 American Dad! episode "Best Little Horror House in Langley Falls", Toshi, dressed as a samurai for Halloween, kills the five serial killers terrorizing Stan, Francine and Roger, seemingly in order to rescue them from certain death, only to pick up the Abba-Zaba dropped by the final killer with his samurai sword and taking a bite from it.
- 2010s: In the 2013 Boardwalk Empire episode "Erlkönig", set in 1924, Gillian offers her grandson Tommy an Abba-Zaba.
- 2010s: In a 2014 episode of The Goldbergs, Abba Zabas caused Barry to have a blockage that required hospitalization.
- 2010s: Midge shares her strategy for obtaining the bars in the 2017 The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, Season 1, Episode 6 “Mrs. X at the Gaslight”: “There’s a vending machine in the employee break room that’s broken, so if you hit it just right, free Abba-Zabas.”
- 2010s: An empty Abba-Zaba candy wrapper is shown on the floor of Camille Preaker’s (played by Amy Adams) bedroom in “Vanish,” the first episode of HBO’s 2018 Sharp Objects, which is based on Gillian Flynn’s best-selling novel of the same name.
- 2010s: Georgie Cooper sells a bootleg Abba-Zaba to another student at school in front of the school’s candy vending machine on Young Sheldon, 2019, Season 3, Episode 3 “An Entrepreneurialist and a Swat on the Bottom” (played by Montana Jordan).
- 2021 Season 7, Episode 3, of Grace and Frankie titled “The Bunny,” Frankie yells at Robert for stealing her Abba-Zaba.
Film/Cinema/Movies
- 1990s: Abba-Zaba bars are featured prominently in the 1998 Dave Chappelle comedy film Half Baked.
Celebrities
- Actor John Wayne had a sweet tooth and Abba-Zaba bars were his favorite candy.[4]
References[]
- ^ The Candy Wrapper Museum. The Candy Wrapper Museum. Retrieved on 2014-03-30.
- ^ "Photo". redesignblog.files.wordpress.com. Retrieved 2021-04-21.
- ^ Hartman, Mary. "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman Episode 74 Apr 15, 1976 - video Dailymotion". Dailymotion.
Other sources[]
- Pacyniak, Bernard (September 2004). "Sweet on Annabelle". . 169 (9): 18–25. ISSN 0745-1032.
External links[]
- Annabellecandy.com - Official website
- Candy Wrapper Museum - Earliest known Abba-Zaba box and wrapper
- Candy bars
- Peanut butter
- Annabelle Candy Company brands