Needles & Grooves

BjorgenFjorgen
BjorgenFjorgen
I think they might be a Canadian candy? But what I want to know is why they don't look like lingonberries.
Mather
Mather
ATTN SWEDISH MEMBERS WE HAVE AN ADDENDUM
folsom_lives
folsom_lives


I guess I should add the "Crunch Berry" content starts at about 05:30.
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kvetcha
kvetcha
Same question but with Swedish Fish.
Mather
Mather
ATTN SWEDISH MEMBERS WE HAVE A SECOND ADDENDUM
Corycm
Corycm
members
Poly-Rythmo
Poly-Rythmo
I think Swedish fish do come from Sweden. They're called "pastellfiskar" there. Norwegians (my kids included) buy a lot of sweets in Sweden as it's *way* cheaper - they like the fish, just not the licorice ones. Think the berries are Canadian though. (I realise you probably didn't want a serious answer but what the hell).
kvetcha
kvetcha
@Poly-Rythmo apparently Swedish Berries are a very similar confection to Swedish Fish, but in a different shape. The same company produces both.

I've never seen them in the US, though.
Mather
Mather
@Poly-Rythmo quite the contrary, I assume I'm going to get inundated with nothing but 100% snark at all times, an actual answer is like gold Poly-Rythmo... GOLD!
Corycm
Corycm
deez berries
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kvetcha
kvetcha
ligma pastellfiskar
nolalady
nolalady
I've never seen Swedish Berries down here, but we have Swedish Fish.
Turbo
Turbo
Does IKEA sell Swedish Fish (or Berries)? I never really noticed. This question is not limited to Swedish members.

Follow-up: If so, is an Allen Key included?
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