Jump to content

Mentos: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m Reverted edits by 206.176.126.115 (talk): unexplained content removal (HG)
Tag: section blanking
Line 6: Line 6:


They have almost the same ingredients except that mint mentos has corn starch and mixed fruit has artificial flavoring and coloring.
They have almost the same ingredients except that mint mentos has corn starch and mixed fruit has artificial flavoring and coloring.

==Flavors==
Mentos are available in several flavors including [[Spearmint (flavour)|mint]], mixed fruit, cola, bubble gum, and in an assortment of [[orange (fruit)|orange]], [[strawberry]], and [[lemon]]. Mentos first appeared as a [[liquorice]]-flavored sweet which can still be purchased in the [[Netherlands]] as "Drop Mentos." New flavors were initially test-marketed in the Netherlands and throughout Europe, however recently, most of the flavors have been available worldwide.

Other flavors include [[green apple]], [[cinnamon]], strawberry, mixed fruit (which contains a mix of cherry, strawberry, orange, and lemon flavors), [[grape]], [[wintergreen]], [[grapefruit]], [[peach]], [[plum]], [[spearmint]], [[yogurt|strawberry yogurt]], lemon yogurt, pineapple (pine fresh), red apple, wild fruit mix, cherry, watermelon, pear, blackcurrant, red orange, [[Ribes|currant]] and two versions of [[Liquorice (confectionery)|black licorice]] flavored Mentos. Two varieties of the mint flavor, known as "Mentos Strong" and "Air action Mentos" are sold in the Netherlands. Also available in the Netherlands is the Special Mix 4 pack, containing the flavors mint, fruit, berry mix and mango orange. Two varieties of the [[Spearmint (flavour)|mint]] flavor are also sold in China, known as "Mint" and "Strong Mint." Grape and 'N Cream (presumably Apples and Cream), Strawberry 'N Cream, and Banana 'N Cream are also marketed in Asia. [[Chocolate]] Mentos were produced in 1989, but the flavor was discontinued. In 2006, the citrus mango flavor was introduced to the Japanese market. In the [[Philippines]], a "Dalandan Fresh" variant is available. Other varieties of Mentos include: Mentos Sours, which recently became available in the [[United States]], featuring Watermelon, Green Apple, and Lemon flavors; caffeinated "Energy" Mentos, sold mainly in Germany, where one roll equals the amount of caffeine in two cups of coffee; "Fresh Cola" flavored Mentos released in New Zealand, Australia and parts of Europe and Asia; and "AIR Mentos" containing [[Menthol]], which are sold primarily in Belgium and the Netherlands.

In the Netherlands, Mentos Gum is sold in blisters and bottles in 6 different varieties: Pure (4 flavors), Fruit (4 flavors), Regular (5 flavors), Bubblegum, Cubes (4 flavors) and White (3 flavors). Mentos Gum is also available in Australia, Greece, China, Canada, Brazil, Turkey, Poland, the Philippines, and recently, the United States in blisters and bottles, both in three different flavors.

[[File:mentossugarfree.jpg|thumb|200px|Mentos Sugar Free]]In August 2005, the variety of the mint which comes in "mixed berries" and "cool mint" flavors was changed to be sweetened with [[Splenda|sucralose]]. In the Netherlands the flavors mint, licorice and fruit are also available in the sugar-free variety.

Australian varieties of Mentos are Mint, Fruit, Strong Mint, Berry Blast, Spearmint, Grape, Cola, Sour Mix, Tropical, Pineapple and Mocktail (piña colada and mojito). Mentos Gum is also available in Peppermint, Spearmint and Orangemint.

The [[UK]] has five current flavors of rolls:
*Fruit (Orange, lemon and strawberry)
*Mint
*Spearmint
*Rainbow flavors (with 2 flavors of each of the following - Raspberry, Watermelon, Apple, Pineapple, Orange, Black Grape and Strawberry).
*Tutti-Frutti - bubblegum flavored - new for 2012.

In the UK, Mentos Gum is also available stick packs (peppermint, spearmint, pure white, air action (menthol) and fruit), Bottles (spearmint, peppermint and red fruit - which retails for approximately £0.99), as well as flip top boxes in peppermint or spearmint with green tea extract, and a pure white with white teas extract. Sugar free versions are available, but these are rarer to find, usually only found in large supermarkets. Mentos gum holds a 4% market share of the UK gum market. A new Mentos 3 was launched in January 2011, in two flavors - mint and Strawberry/Apple/Raspberry, which are similar to Wrigleys' 5 in packaging. A new blackberry/kiwi/strawberry version was released into the UK market in January 2012.

In [[Greece]], Mentos are very popular, and are available in the following formats:
*Mint
*Strawberry
*Melon
*Watermelon
*Fruit (Orange, lemon and strawberry),
*Energy (each roll is equivalent to 2 cups of coffee)
*Mentos gum in Bottles
*Mentos Cube
*Mentos in Boxes (mint and Fruit).
[[File:Mentos-Cinnamon-Mints.jpg|thumb|right|Cinnamon Mentos]]
Mini Mentos, somewhat smaller than ordinary Mentos, are available in the Netherlands in two varieties: Mini Mentos Fruitmix, which contains the flavors orange, lemon, strawberry and apple, and Mini Mentos Yoghurt, with the flavors strawberry yogurt, raspberry yogurt and blueberry yogurt. Also sold is Mentos KIDZ, a bag with 12 boxes containing 10 miniature candies, in the flavors strawberry, orange, lemon, apple and blueberry.
"Mentos Teens" is available in [[Brazil]] and the rest of [[Latin-America]]. They come in a rectangular box. The mint is basically miniature Mentos roughly the size of [[Skittles (confectionery)|Skittles]], and they come in mixed flavors: white grape (green), lemon (yellow), strawberry (pink), orange (orange), raspberry (blue), and cherry (red).

During the World Cup, a Brazilian team Mentos was released in Brazil to support the national team. The mint was green and yellow.

In some countries, the [[Mentos Ice]] candy can be bought in flavors such as, [[cherry]] (red), [[green apple]] (green) and [[grape]] (purple).

[[Ume]], Fuji apple, and Pine Fresh (pineapple) Mentos are sold exclusively in Japan.


==Marketing==
==Marketing==

Revision as of 13:50, 25 March 2014

Mentos boxes

Mentos[1] is a brand of mints, of the "scotch mint" type, sold in more than 130 countries worldwide[2] by the Perfetti Van Melle corporation. Mentos was first produced in the Netherlands in 1948. The mints are small oblate spheroids, with a slightly hard exterior and a soft, chewy interior. They are sold in rolls which typically contain 14 mint discs, although the new "Sour Mix" flavor contains only 11 discs per roll. Certain flavors are sold in boxes in Australia, the United States, Indonesia, Brazil and the United Kingdom, and the rolls are available in four packs. The slogan of Mentos is "Stay Fresh"[3] although many people will still remember the brand for the endline used extensively in the 80's & 90's "The Freshmaker". Most Mentos packages describe the mints as "chewy dragées." The typical Mentos roll is approximately 2 cm (0.79 in) in diameter and weighs 38 grams.

Ingredients

The mint mentos have sugar, glucose syrup, hydrogenated coconut oil, canaburba, dextrin, natural flavor, corn starch, and gum arabic inside/outside of it. The flavored mentos (mixed fruit) have sugar, glucose syrup, hydrogenated coconut oil, gellan gum, dextrin, natural and artificial flavor, gum arabic, and coloring inside/outside of it.[4]

They have almost the same ingredients except that mint mentos has corn starch and mixed fruit has artificial flavoring and coloring.

Marketing

Part of Mentos's popularity in the US can be attributed to its campy TV commercials and catchy jingle, which debuted in late 1991 on American television. Shot in South Africa, individuals facing various day-to-day dilemmas consume Mentos and are subsequently inspired to solve their problems at hand in a creative, often-humorous fashion.[5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17]

These unusual behaviors are typically witnessed by nearby, sometimes antagonistic characters, and a roll of Mentos is boisterously displayed by the commercial's respective protagonist to the observer as an explanation for their actions. The ad campaign was parodied in the Foo Fighters music video for their song "Big Me."[18] A parody of the Mentos television ad campaign was also featured in the indie film comedy "NoHo" from 1995.

Worth noting is the resurgence of popularity for these campy spots. A handful of self-styled recreations have been independently produced by YouTube users.

Recently, Mentos Gum has gotten its own commercial. It displays a man sitting near a business water tank, and pops a piece of Mentos Gum in his mouth. A woman then walks by, pushes his nose up, and proceeds to kiss him, the kiss making a slurping sound. The woman then wipes her mouth, and pushes the man's nose back down as if to close it. The phrase "Mouthwatering" was used. However, more recently, the slurping, kissing sounds have been removed.[19]

In India, the slogan of Mentos is 'Mentos Khao Dimaag Ki bati jalao' which translates to 'Eat Mentos and turn on your mind's idea lightbulb'. TV ads are generally based on a situation where a loser eats Mentos and becomes a winner.

Another Mentos advert highlighted the multicolored variety of the sweets by showing a scene where two young lovers are sitting in a living room. The teen girl screams as a small seemingly harmless spider crawls across the carpet. This prompts the teen boy to get off the couch that they are sitting on and pick up the spider, only to be violently thrown about by the spider. The slogan at the end reads "sometimes it's best to be ready for the next thing"

Mentos in Arabic countries, such as Egypt or Morocco, are often sold in smaller rolls roughly half the size of a regular Mentos roll.

Mentos is the plural form of the word, with 'mento' being the singular form.[20]

Competing brands

  • A similar mint in the US, called "Chewz", is manufactured by Lance, Inc. Mentos fans have jokingly referred to this as the "anti-Mentos."[citation needed]
  • Trebor Softmints and Softfruits, introduced in 1981 and sold in the United Kingdom and Ireland by Cadbury-Schweppes are also similar to Mentos, although slightly larger and with softer exterior coatings.

Mentos and soft drink reaction

A Diet Coke bottle, shortly after Mentos were dropped into it.
Movie of Mentos geyser

First demonstrated by chemistry teacher Lee Marek on the Late Show with David Letterman in 1999,[21] and later popularized in a June 2006[22] viral Internet video by Eepybird, a Mentos mint expedites a rapid release of carbon dioxide when dropped into a carbonated liquid, such as a soft drink. A variety of factors, contributed by both the candies and the soda, contribute to the dramatic effect.

When the candies come into contact with the liquid, a reaction causes the formation of foam at a rapid rate. A 2006 episode of the television show Mythbusters concluded that the potassium benzoate, aspartame, and CO2 gas contained in the Diet Coke, in combination with the gelatin and gum arabic ingredients of the Mentos, all contribute to formation of the foam.[23] However, the structure of the Mentos is the most significant cause of the eruption due to nucleation. The surface of the candy is a highly pitted surface that offers a large, concentrated number of nucleation sites for CO2 bubbles to form (nucleate). Mythbusters reported that when flavored Mentos with a smooth waxy coating were tested in carbonated drink there was hardly a reaction, whereas standard Mentos added to carbonated drink formed an energetic eruption, affirming the nucleation-site theory.

The resulting geyser (popularly known as a "Diet Coke and Mentos eruption") can shoot as high as 6 meters (20 ft). The unofficial record, reached in MythBusters, was over 34 feet with the use of a nozzle.[23]

A Guinness World Record of 2,865 simultaneous geysers was set on October 17, 2010, in an event organized by Perfetti Van Melle (Philippines) at the SM Mall of Asia Complex, in Manila, Philippines.[24]

In November, 2006, the Urban Legends Reference Pages examined the rumors of people dying from eating Mentos and drinking cola. Their research found that while eating Mentos and drinking cola can result in people regurgitating the foamy result, no actual news accounts exist of anyone dying from it.[25] MythBusters also tested this hypothesis using sheep parts and found that the act of drinking the cola releases enough of the carbonation to prevent the violent reaction caused when the Mentos is added to the cola directly.

This reaction was used as a plot point in the film Wreck-It Ralph. One of the film's protagonists lives in "Diet Cola Mountain," where inhabitants must "beware of falling Mentos" stalactites. If these Mentos pieces fall into the mountain's diet cola hot springs, the result is a violent eruption, which plays a part in the film's finale.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Mentos.com". Retrieved 16 February 2014.
  2. ^ "Mentos Google +". Google+. Retrieved 16 February 2014.
  3. ^ Brownsell, Alex (16 Feb 2013). "Mentos unveils 'Stay fresh' global campaign". Marketing. Retrieved 19 March 2013.
  4. ^ What Ingredients Are In Mentos? LIVESTRONG.COM. Retrieved 2013-12-17
  5. ^ "Classic mentos commercial". YouTube. Retrieved 2013-10-23.
  6. ^ "Classic mentos commercial". YouTube. Retrieved 2013-10-23.
  7. ^ "Classic mentos commercial". YouTube. Retrieved 2013-10-23.
  8. ^ "classic mentos commercial". YouTube. 2006-12-03. Retrieved 2013-10-23.
  9. ^ "Comercial Mentos 1993". YouTube. 2008-02-26. Retrieved 2013-10-23.
  10. ^ "Classic mentos commercial". YouTube. Retrieved 2013-10-23.
  11. ^ "Classic mentos commercial". YouTube. Retrieved 2013-10-23.
  12. ^ "Mentos commercial (The Mall) from the 90s". YouTube. 2008-08-22. Retrieved 2013-10-23.
  13. ^ "Mentos commercial (The Wedding) from the 90s". YouTube. 2008-12-08. Retrieved 2013-10-23.
  14. ^ "Classic Mentos Commercial - R/C Boat (1998)". YouTube. 2009-01-11. Retrieved 2013-10-23.
  15. ^ "Mentos beauty mask commercial (BAD AUDIO - MUTE!!!)". YouTube. Retrieved 2013-10-23.
  16. ^ "YouTube". YouTube. Retrieved 2013-10-23.
  17. ^ "YouTube". YouTube. Retrieved 2013-10-23.
  18. ^ "Foo Fighters Get Hit With Mentos; Excited About Unusual Grammy Nomination". Starpulse.com. 2006-01-31. Retrieved 2012-08-06.
  19. ^ "Mentos Gum - It's Mouthwatering - Water Cooler (2008) :15 (USA) commercials". adland.tv. Retrieved 2012-08-06.
  20. ^ "What is the singular of mentos?". Wordhippo.com. Retrieved 2013-10-23.
  21. ^ "Video of Lee Marek on David Letterman Show, September 14, 1999". Chem.uic.edu. Retrieved 2013-10-23.
  22. ^ "Google Insights timeline histogram of search topic "Diet Coke and Mentos"". Google.com. Retrieved 2013-10-23.
  23. ^ a b "Mythbusters: Diet Coke and Mentos". TV.com. Retrieved 2009-09-20.
  24. ^ "Most Mentos and soda fountains". Guinness World Records. 2010-10-17. Retrieved 2011-05-27.
  25. ^ "Urban Legends Reference Pages: Mentos and Coke Death". Snopes.com. Retrieved 2012-10-15.