Chiclets is an American brand of candy-coatedchewing gum manufactured byPerfetti Van Melle. The brand was introduced in 1900 by theAmerican Chicle Company, a company founded byThomas Adams.[1]
The Chiclets name derives from theMexican Spanish word "chicle," from the AztecNahuatl word "chictli/tzictli", meaning "sticky stuff" and referring to a pre-Columbian chewing gum found throughout Mesoamerica. This pre-Columbian chewing gum was tapped as a sap from various trees.
Chiclets are essentially the same as regular chewing gum,[citation needed][disputed –discuss] with the innovation of a hard sugar coating offered in various flavors and colors. The original flavor was peppermint and assorted fruit flavors were available in Algeria, Argentina, Canada, Colombia, the Dominican Republic, Egypt, India, Iraq, Lebanon, Mexico, Portugal, Syria, Turkey, the United Kingdom, and parts of the Americas.[2][failed verification] In some markets, like Mexico, the brand is known as "Adam's Chiclets",[3] named like that afterbrand founder Thomas Adams.
Both in Brazil and in Portugal, the namechiclete became a generic word for chewing gum due to the popularity of the brand.[4]
Various people have been credited with inventing Chiclets, including the brothers Robert andFrank Fleer[5][6] and Louis Mahle.[7]
In 2019, the Saturday Evening Post said that as of 2016, Mondelez had discontinued selling Chiclets in the United States.[8][6] It has re-appeared as of 2019, manufactured in Mexico.[9] In 2020 the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board held that the Chiclets trademark had not been abandoned.[8][10] To further confuse the issue it was noted in an article on the Mashed website that Chiclets, identified as Adams Chiclets, were available atWalmart,Kmart andAmazon in the United States.[8] Ingredient lists now show aspartame being used as a sweetener, while still showing sugar and glucose.
On December 19, 2022,Mondelez announced that it was selling its gum business, including the Chiclets brands, toPerfetti Van Melle, the makers ofMentos. The deal closed on October 2, 2023.[11]
Inice hockey, the slang termspitting chiclets describes spitting broken teeth onto the ice (the teeth supposedly resembling Chiclets), a not-uncommon event in ice hockey, where hard blows to the face are a hazard of play.[12] A popular hockey podcast is namedSpittin' Chiclets.
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