Background
The original Banjo chocolate bar was sold in the Greater London area, UK, but the product was discontinued in 1954. At that time, it was a chocolate wafer bar, with a chocolate filling, covered in milk chocolate, rather similar to Kit Kat.[3] Banjo was reintroduced with a substantial television advertising campaign in 1976. In this reincarnation, Banjo was a twin bar (similar in shape and size to Twix) and was the same as a Drifter but with a chopped peanut layer and the whole covered in milk chocolate. It was packaged in distinctive navy blue - with the brand name prominently displayed in yellow block text - and was one of the first British snack bars to have a heat-sealed wrapper closure instead of the reverse-side fold common to most domestically produced chocolate bars at that time. It was available into the 1980s.[4] There was a coconut version also available in a red wrapper with yellow text.
See also
Further reading
References
- T. Richardson. Sweets: A History of Candy Bloomsbury Publishing, 2008, retrieved 6 August 2022^
- Nathan Bevan. The 21 childhood chocolate bars you wish they'd bring back WalesOnline, 2016-10-11, retrieved 2022-08-06^
- Carmella de Lucia. The discontinued chocolate bars you'll wish were still around today CheshireLive, 2017-10-28, retrieved 2022-08-06^
- Retro sweets we BET you remember Netmums, 2016-12-29, retrieved 2022-08-06^