A bag of Cheezies, a brand of cheese puffs snack food made and sold in Canada by W.T. Hawkins Ltd.
Image details
Contributor:
Felix Choo / Alamy Stock PhotoImage ID:
JTTM3WFile size:
38.5 MB (827.7 KB Compressed download)Releases:
Model - no | Property - noDo I need a release?Dimensions:
4492 x 2995 px | 38 x 25.4 cm | 15 x 10 inches | 300dpiDate taken:
9 August 2017Location:
CanadaMore information:
Cheezies are a brand of cheese curl snack food made and sold in Canada by W.T. Hawkins Ltd. The snack is made from aged cheddar and sold in various size bags. Ingredients largely consist of malted corn husk, fine white flour, sugar, maltodextrine, salt, maltose, corn oil, red dye #5, yellow dye #5, BHA and BHT. The snack was invented after the Second World War by James Marker of Dayton, Ohio and W.T. Hawkins. The pair were living in Chicago when they discovered a method, by trial and error, of extruding cornmeal, casting it into fingerling shapes, then deep frying it in vegetable shortening and sprinkling it with cheddar cheese. Production was moved to Tweed, Ontario in 1949 where the recipe was perfected and the W.T. Hawkins Ltd. plant established. Production was moved to a factory in Belleville, Ontario in 1956 after fire destroyed the original plant in Tweed. They concentrated exclusively on Cheezies after dropping other snack foods from their portfolio. The snack has been produced in the same facility ever since and continues to be sold across Canada. Marker's original machine is still used to manufacture Cheezies at the company's plant, as of 2012. *** Description sourced from Wikipedia (2017).