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Dunkaroos, Beloved Children’s Snack of the ’90s, Will Return This Summer

Plus, natural foods grocery chain Earth Fare is shuttering, and more news to start your day

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Dunkaroos packaging overlaid on a background of frosting.
Dunkaroos are returning this summer.
Dunkaroos photo: Dunkaroos. Frosting photo: Dunkaroos.

Dunkaroos, like the ’90s, are back

AriZona iced tea is an aesthetic, teens unironically love Friends, scrunchies are back in — and continuing the wave of ’90s nostalgia, Dunkaroos are making a comeback.

The beloved childhood snack, consisting of cookies and a small bit of frosting for dunking, was first introduced in 1992 and was discontinued in the U.S. in 2012. For years, it was only available in Canada; General Mills even ran a “Smugglaroos” campaign encouraging Canadians to bring the snack across the border for Americans. But come summer 2020, there will be no more smuggling necessary, as the most popular flavor — vanilla cookies accompanied by vanilla frosting with sprinkles — returns to grocery store aisles stateside.

Fans, including celebrities like Kim Kardashian and Tyler, the Creator, have been asking for the return of Dunkaroos for years — a plea that the snack brand has smartly used in its marketing, resurfacing those requests alongside blatant ’90s nostalgia pandering on its newly created Twitter and Instagram accounts.

“We know there’s a lot of love for Dunkaroos, and fans everywhere have been asking for it,” said Jeff Caswell, president of snacks at General Mills, in a press release. “We’re excited to help ’90s kids relive all the best parts of childhood.”

And in other news…

  • Organic and natural foods grocery chain Earth Fare is closing all 50 of its locations. [Canton Rep]
  • A survey conducted by the New York City Hospitality Alliance found that 62 percent of area restaurants were charged for answering calls through Grubhub phone numbers even when orders weren’t placed, and 91 percent of survey respondents say they have yet to receive the refunds for the bogus phone fees that Grubhub promised. [NY Post]
  • How Iowa’s oldest Chinese restaurant became a fusion pizza place. [BuzzFeed News]
  • Inside the world of nudist cooking: “It’s better naked. They feel less inhibited, more creative.” [NYT]
  • Olive Garden’s Valentine’s Day special includes a bouqueting of breadsticks, which I’d take over roses any day. [Insider]
  • Also joining in the V-Day festivities is Domino’s Australia, which is giving away a pizza-shaped engagement ring:

All AM Intel Coverage [E]