Trade name; chocolate-covered chocolate nougat candy bar developed by Frank Mars in Minneapolis-St Paul, 1923.
| Food and Nutrition: Mars bar |
Trade name; chocolate-covered chocolate nougat candy bar developed by Frank Mars in Minneapolis-St Paul, 1923.
| Wikipedia: Mars Bar |
| Mars Bar | |
|---|---|
| Type | Confectionery |
| Current owner | Mars Incorporated |
| Introduced | 1932 |
The Mars Bar is a chocolate bar manufactured by Mars Inc. It was first manufactured in Slough in the United Kingdom in 1932 as a sweeter version of the American Milky Way bar which Mars, Inc. produced in the USA (not to be confused with the European version of the Milky Way, which is a different confection). A different chocolate bar with the same name was sold in the USA until 2002. It contained plain nougat, almonds, caramel and milk chocolate. The UK 58 gram Mars Bar contains 259 calories equivalent to 13% of an average adult suggested daily calorie intake.
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Chocolate bars sold as the Mars Bar vary in different regions of the world.[1] The American version (discontinued in 2000)[2] is no longer sold, and has been replaced with the slightly different Snickers Almond.[2] The European version of the Mars bar is sold in some United States grocery stores, usually being found in the imported or ethnic food sections.
In 1932, Forrest Mars, estranged son of American candy maker Frank Mars, rented a factory in Slough and with a staff of twelve people began manufacturing a kind of chocolate bar that had not been seen before in the UK. At that time most chocolate was simply a solid block, whereas the Mars Bar consisted of nougat and caramel covered in milk chocolate. It was modelled after his father's Milky Way bar, which was already popular in the US.[3] Today the basic recipe is unaltered but the size of the bar and the proportions of the main components have changed over the years.
In 2002, the UK Mars Bar was reformulated and repackaged.[4] The nougat was made lighter, the chocolate on top became noticeably thinner, and the overall weight of the bar was reduced slightly. The packaging was also redesigned with a less-bold and more cursive logo.
The famous slogan "A Mars a day helps you work, rest and play" was written by William Dagnall as a competition tie breaker in 1966.[5] This was replaced with "Pleasure you can't measure", a re-branding intended to appeal to a more feminine, youthful market. [6]
Various sizes are made: miniature bars called "FUN SIZE" (19.7 gram); "Snack Time" (36.5 gram) which is sold in multiple packs; a larger multi-pack size of 54 gram, the regular sized single 58 gram bar and a "Kingsize" 84 gram bar which has since been replaced by "Mars Duo" (91 gram) this is a pack that contains 2 smaller bars instead of 1 large one. The regular 58 gram single bar contains 259 calories.
In the UK, most Mars Bars are still made at the Slough Trading Estate.
Since the summer of 2006, all Mars Bars produced in Canada are peanut-free. Mars is one of the few chocolate bars in North America for which no size of the product has any trace of peanuts. In February 2008, Mars Canada introduced a new variety of Mars bar called "Mars Caramel" to compete with the Cadbury Caramilk and Nestle Aero Caramel bars.
Several limited-edition variants of Mars Bars have been released in various countries. (These have often been permanent releases in other countries). They include:
Other products have also been released using the Mars branding.
The Original Mars bar in "Believe" packaging was sold in the UK from 18 April 2006 until the end of the 2006 FIFA World Cup in July. "Believe" took prominence on the packaging ("Original Mars" appeared in smaller print) to indicate support for the England national football team. Advertising in other nations of the UK was tailored to reflect their own teams after the public condemnation, although in Scotland the "Believe" packaging was still used - causing negative publicity.[7]
On 30 July 2008, the Tasmanian government announced that it had secured a major sponsor, Mars for a bid to enter the Australian Football League in a deal worth $4 million over 3 years and will temporarily change the name of its top-selling chocolate bar in Australia to Believe, to help promote Tasmania's cause.[8]
This is a Mars bar which has been coated with batter and deep-fried in oil or beef fat. First reports of battered Mars bars being sold in Stonehaven[citation needed], Scotland date back to 1995[10]
Deep-fried Mars bars are available from some fish-and-chip shops in Britain, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the United States[11].[citation needed]
In July 2005, Mars Bars, along with the Snickers bar, were recalled due to an anonymous extortion attempt against Star City Casino in Sydney. The extortionist claimed to have poisoned seven Mars and Snickers bars at random in New South Wales. As a result Masterfoods Corporation, the company that manufactures Mars Bars in Australia, recalled the entire Mars and Snickers product from store shelves in New South Wales. Nineteen people were possibly affected, with two being admitted to hospital. In the later half of August 2005, the threat to the public was deemed negligible and the bars returned to shelves, accompanied by a state-wide advertising campaign incorporating the slogan "Feels good to be back".
In May 2007 Mars UK announced that Mars Bars, along with many of their other products such as Snickers, Maltesers, Minstrels and Twix would no longer be suitable for vegetarians and Hindus because of the introduction of rennet, a chemical sourced from calves’ stomachs used in the production of whey.[12] Masterfoods confirmed that many other products such as Easter eggs and ice cream would also be affected.
The rabbinical authorities declared that the products remained kosher for Jewish consumption.[13]
The decision was condemned by several groups, with the Vegetarian Society stating that "at a time when more and more consumers are concerned about the provenance of their food, Mars’ decision to use non-vegetarian whey is a backward step".
Mars later abandoned these plans, stating that it became "very clear, very quickly" that it had made a mistake.[14]
It has been observed on several occasions that the price of a Mars Bar correlates fairly accurately with the change in value of the pound sterling since World War II.[15]
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