Posted: Thu May 24, 2007 11:36 pm

Forum to post messages about Bree and Danielbeast
https://lg15.cassieiswatching.com/forum/
https://lg15.cassieiswatching.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=10468
*caught* thanks.Chelseyrl wrote:Catch.
Chelseyrl wrote:*munch munch munch munch mu--*
OMG I'm gonna be sick.
and how many have you had?Chelseyrl wrote:I can only eat like 4 before I feel sick.
Chelseyrl wrote:8
Chelseyrl wrote:I won't. I seriously cannot eat anymore. They're good... but damn.
Okay, now you're just being cruel. I can say puke and be fine, but if you go into detail... huhbluhabba.Cloud_ax wrote:Chelseyrl wrote:I won't. I seriously cannot eat anymore. They're good... but damn.![]()
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you probably shouldnt eat anymore, they probably arnt as good comming up as going down.
oops my bad. sorryChelseyrl wrote:Okay, now you're just being cruel. I can say puke and be fine, but if you go into detail... huhbluhabba.
Wikipedia wrote:Circus Peanuts are a peanut-shaped marshmallow candy invented in the 1800s. Although the most popular variety of mass-produced Circus Peanuts today is orange-colored with an artificial banana flavor, confectioners originally distributed an orange-flavored variety that were only available seasonally due to a lack of packaging capable of preserving the candy; in the Springtime, five-and-dimes sold Circus Peanuts as penny candy. In the 1940s Circus Peanuts became one of the many foods to become available year-round owing to the industrial proliferation of polyethylene packaging.
Today, mass-produced Circus Peanuts are made from sugar, corn syrup, gelatin, soy protein, food coloring and artificial flavor. Over the years, confectioners have also offered Circus Peanuts colored yellow, pink, and white. Many include multiple flavors as well. The leading producers of Circus Peanuts are Melster Candies, Spangler Candy Company, and Brach's Confections.
In 1963, General Mills vice president John Holahan inventively discovered that Circus Peanuts shavings yielded a tasty enhancement to his breakfast cereal. General Mills formalized the innovation and created Lucky Charms, the first breakfast cereal to contain marshmallow bits (or "marbits").
The type of gelatin used is pork skin.