Whether you want sweet or healthy or something in between, there’s cereal for you—unless your favorite is one that was discontinued at some point. For many of us, cereal was a staple breakfast growing up. It was easy to eat quickly before running off to school.
Just Right cereal, which was launched in 1985 and unique to Canada, has been discontinued. The Kellogg Canada media representative wrote in an emailed statement to CBC news that, “Unfortunately consumer demand for Kellogg’s Just Right cereal was not strong enough to support continued production.”
The Kellogg Canada media representative wrote in an emailed statement to CBC news that, “Unfortunately consumer demand for Kellogg’s Just Right cereal was not strong enough to support continued production.” “As a result, we can confirm that the product has been discontinued.”
Choose items to buy together. This item:Kelloggs Just Right 500g $21.74 ($0.04/gram) In Stock. Ships from and sold by Simply British Ltd. FREE Shipping Post Honey Shreddies Cereal, 540g/19.04oz Packaging may vary {Imported from Canada} $13.14 ($13.14/Count) Only 10 left in stock – order soon.
What is just right cereal?
Just Right. Just Right is the name of a breakfast cereal produced by Kellogg’s. It was created in the 1980s for health-conscious, athletic Australians, who are the world’s third-biggest cereal eaters.
It is also labelled as vitamin-fortified and low-fat. No raisins, date nuggets, or sliced almonds are in the Canadian version, but oats are. An early commercial for the cereal in the United States has become an internet viral video due to it featuring a then-unknown Tori Amos .
What are the ingredients in the cereal box?
Long-time groupies of the cereal, which lists being made “with four simple grains” on the box (whole grain wheat, corn, whole grain oats and sugar are the first four ingredients) are upset about the product’s cancellation.
The soon-to-be-obsolete cereal is still available, while supplies last, but you may have a hard time finding it on city shelves. The cereal is flying off shelves in Calgary, as the Calgary Eyeopener’s Paul Karchut confirmed.
The Kellogg’s cereal Just Right has been hard to find lately, and that’s why fans of it like Carrie Plesuk have taken to stockpiling it before it goes out of stock. (Paul Karchut/CBC) What was just right for some people wasn’t a money-making product for the Kellogg brand in Canada.
Just Right cereal, which was launched in 1985 and unique to Canada, has been discontinued. The Kellogg Canada media representative wrote in an emailed statement to CBC news that, “Unfortunately consumer demand for Kellogg’s Just Right cereal was not strong enough to support continued production.”.
What cereals were rivals in the 1970s?
Baron Von Redberry and Sir Grapefellow. These 1970s cereals were “rivals,” so we’ll put them together. Each was fruit flavored with a ridiculously fun mascot on the front, hence their names. These cereals also included “starbits,” and if you can’t recall what those are, well, they were just marshmallows.
Nickelodeon, yet again, rolled out a thematic cereal, this time in the 1990s to coincide with Rugrats. The cereal, though, was all about the best Rugrats character, Reptar, so it was dinosaur-shaped. Who doesn’t love a dinosaur-shaped cereal? This cereal was sweet and delicious but only lasted for a little bit.
Yummy Mummy was also called Fruit Brute for a bit, but neither iteration exists anymore alongside the other monsters: Count Chocula, Boo-Berry, etc. Yummy Mummy, which we only got to enjoy in the late ’80s and early ’90s, had marshmallow bats in it, which were the best part of this cereal. 14.
Similar to Cocoa Puffs, Crazy Cow cereal turned your milk chocolate. Or, if you had the strawberry flavor, it turned your milk strawberry. The cereal was released in the late 1970s and saw a big push in sales from Star Wars fans when they started putting trading cards in the boxes.
In the 1980s, we were all enjoying C-3PO’s, a honey-flavored cereal similar to cereal but shaped like little B’s and 8’s. This cereal conveniently came out right after the first Star Wars trilogy wrapped, but it didn’t stick around for long.
The heroes in the half shell got their own cereal in 1989 , complete with pizza-shaped marshmallows. The marshmallow shapes also included the turtles’ weapons, but the pizza was the real star. The cereal itself was supposed to look like little nets, but it was pretty much just Chex. It didn’t matter; we loved it, along with the plastic bowls the cereal was packaged with.
Naturally, the marshmallows were shaped like Pac-Man characters. However, this cereal went the way of Pac-Man himself, who is just not quite as popular now as he was in the ’80s.