Kix (cereal)

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Kix
Kix (cereal) Logo.jpg
Owner General Mills
Introduced 1937
Website http://www.kixcereal.com/

Kix® (stylized as KiX) is a brand of American cold breakfast cereal introduced in 1937 by the General Mills company of Golden Valley, Minnesota.[1] The product is an extruded, expanded puffed-grain cereal made with whole grain corn.

Products

File:Newkix.jpg
A 2010 version of the Kix cereal box
Honey Kix, enlarged to show texture.

General Mills introduced Berry Berry Kix in 1992 and Honey Kix in 2009. In Original Kix, total sugars are about 10% by weight, which is about 3 grams of sugar per serving. Honey Kix has 6 grams of sugar, Berry Berry Kix 7 grams.[2]

Production

The grain is processed and expanded (water is added and the corn is pulverized). Cooking of Kix occurs in the extruder, then the dough is formed into the desired shape by extrusion through a die. It was the first cereal to be manufactured using this process.[citation needed]

Experimentation with this puffing process led to other popular brands like Cheerios.[3][4]

Promotions

In 1947, Kix offered a Lone Ranger atomic bomb ring in exchange for a box top and 15 cents.[5] The ring contained a spinthariscope, so that when the red base (which served as a "secret message compartment") was taken off, and after a period of time for dark adaptation, you could look through a small plastic lens at scintillations caused by polonium alpha particles striking a zinc sulfide screen.[6]

Advertising slogans

The slogan "Kid Tested. Mother Approved." was introduced in 1978. During the 1980s, television commercials included the jingle "Kids love Kix for what Kix has got. Moms love Kix for what Kix has not."[citation needed]

References

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  3. Tom Forsythe, et al. General Mills: 75 Years of Innovation, Invention, Food & Fun (2003)
  4. James Gray, Business Without Boundary: The Story of General Mills (1954)
  5. Reif, Rita. ARTS/ARTIFACTS; Trivia Long Ago, Serious Treasures Now. The New York Times. 11 June 1995.
  6. Lone Ranger Atom Bomb Ring Spinthariscope (1947 – early 1950s)

External links


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