It’s the end of this beloved chocolate that existed for almost 150 years

It’s the end of this beloved chocolate that existed for almost 150 years
It’s the end of this beloved chocolate that existed for almost 150 years

Our childish heart is broken.

As we learn The Montreal Journalthe Hershey company has ended production of Cherry Blossom, a candy that existed for nearly 150 years and was long made in Quebec.

This is the end of this treat that we love

“I bought all the ones from the Jean Coutu in my neighborhood. There were 17 in the display,” says Journal Jean Benoît Duval, a Montreal artist who loves this ball of coconut chocolate containing a maraschino cherry bathed in a sweet syrup.

The Hershey Company confirmed Wednesday to CityNews Toronto the end of this candy.

It’s at 19e century that the American entrepreneur Walter Lowney developed this recipe in Massachusetts. It will continue to grow in popularity to the point of becoming one of the favorite treats of… Canadians.

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This is because the Lowney’s company opened a division in Canada in 1905 and the Cherry Blossom became one of the country’s iconic candies, according to Lindsey Becker, author of a site dedicated to the history of candies.

A chocolate from Quebec

It was the Sherbrooke factory that manufactured the chocolates from 1959 until its closure in 1989.

For Mr. Duval, the Cherry Blossom was a “vintage” piece of pop culture, much like KFC’s breaded chicken. “20 years ago, when I bit into a Cherry Blossom for the first time, I was seduced by the chocolate flavor with which the juicy cherry mixed in the mouth. There was something comforting about that.”

Canada

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