Childhood Cereals We Wish They'd Bring Back

Childhood Cereals We Miss

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Retro Cereals We Miss
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Morning Memories

Cereal has had a spot at the breakfast table for decades, but longtime favorites such as Cheerios and Frosted Flakes are the exception, not the rule. So many cereals have come and gone that many varieties we loved as kids are just a hazy memory. There is good news, though: General Mills brought back Count Chocula, Boo-Berry, Franken Berry, and Frute Brute Monster Cereal year-round, all of which were introduced in the early to mid-1970s. Those classics may be back for more than just the Halloween season for the first time in over a decade, but we can only hope our other nostalgic favorites also will return one day.


Related: Foods Americans Eat Now That They Never Heard of 20 Years Ago

Grins & Smiles & Giggles & Laughs
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Dunkin' Donuts
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Puffa Puffa Rice
Puffa Puffa Rice by Tom Simpson (CC BY)
Rocky Road
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Rocky Road

We're pining for the days when "little marshmallows with a chocolatey, nutty coating mixed with vanilla and chocolatey puffs" really were part of a complete breakfast. Rocky Road, a General Mills cereal from the mid-'80s, also had a super-cute troupe of three mascots: the hard-rocking Choco (a chocolate puff), Van (a vanilla puff), and Marsha (a chocolate-covered marshmallow).

Pac-Man
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Pac-Man

Boil the '80s down to a video game, and it may well be Pac-Man. Boil the '80s down to a cereal, and it may well be Pac-Man, too. General Mills' Pac-Man cereal popped up in grocery stores in 1983, featuring round, Kix-like sweetened corn pieces with Pac-Man-shaped marshmallows. A couple years after its debut, a Ms. Pac-Man marshmallow joined the party with her "shocking pink bow."

Concentrate
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Concentrate

Kellogg's Concentrate proves that even the healthier, less flashy cereals of days gone by have their fans, too — it's in the top 10 of Mr. Breakfast's All-Time Greatest Cereals. Introduced in 1959, it was on store shelves into the '70s and aimed to provide a ton of vitamins and nutrients in every bite. The tiny flakes expanded so much in milk that a serving amounted to only a couple of tablespoons.

Cracker Jack
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Cracker Jack

It's only natural there was a Cracker Jack cereal, introduced by Ralston in 1983. A commercial touted the "cracklin' crunchy puffs of incredibly colossal caramel taste," while adorable kiddos greeted the morning with sit-ups and a casual jog around the yard. But the biggest draw, of course, was the prize in every box.

Quisp
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Quisp

You can still find Quaker Quisp online, but good luck hunting it down in person. It's a shame, because this popular cereal of the '60s and '70s takes the top spot in Mr. Breakfast's All-Time Greatest Cereal Poll, even beating No. 2 Frosted Flakes. From its adorable pink alien mascot to the sweet, crunchy corn pieces shaped like saucers, Quisp deserves a spot on grocery shelves once again.

C-3PO's
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C-3PO'S

Quisp wasn't the only cereal with an out-of-this-world mascot. Kellogg's hopped on the "Star Wars" mania bandwagon in 1984 with C-3PO's. Billed as a "crunchy new force at breakfast," the slightly sweet, double-O pieces were made of oats, wheat, and corn and tasted similar to Alpha-Bits, according to cereal fans.

Waffelos
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Waffelos

One trip down memory lane courtesy of an old Waffelos commercial may have you pining for this syrup-flavored Ralston creation, which debuted in 1979 and lingered until the mid-'80s. Waffelo Bill and his horse were pretty adorable, but fans say there was nothing quite like the maple-butter flavor of Waffelos, which also managed to stay crunchy in milk.

Buc Wheats
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Buc Wheats

"Pass the Buc Wheats!" This General Mills offering was a staple on breakfast tables in the 1970s and early '80s. It's among the healthier cereals we're still pining for, but even though it was touted as a nutritious breakfast, the crispy, buckwheat flakes were jazzed up with a maple-flavored coating that made it crave-worthy. 

Mr. T
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Mr. T

We pity the fool who doesn't remember Mr. T Cereal, introduced by Quaker in 1984. The T-shaped pieces were made with sweetened corn and oats, and tasted a lot like Cap'n Crunch. As the cartoon commercial made clear: "It's cool!"

Croonchy Stars
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Croonchy Stars

It's hard not to have a soft spot for the first-ever Muppet cereal. Made by Post, Croonchy Stars debuted in 1988 and featured none other than the zany Swedish Chef. It was discontinued a year later, possibly doomed by its soggy cinnamon taste. Still, the entertaining boxes make it worth a comeback — they were designed by Jim Henson himself. Bork, bork, bork!

KABOOM
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Kaboom

An online petition to bring back Kaboom has more than 2,600 signatures, proving this General Mills cereal still has impassioned fans. Made up of smiley-face corn pieces and marshmallows shaped like stars, it hit shelves in 1969 and remained popular through the '70s and '80s. "There was enough artificial coloring in Kaboom to make you literally poop out rainbows," one columnist remembers. Say no more, sir, and sign us up.

Freakies
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Freakies

If you were a '70s kid, you may have started your day with a bowl of Freakies. This Ralston cereal debuted in 1973 with simple, sweet, Cheerio-like rings. It also benefited from ingenious marketing, with a slew of monster mascots who lived in a "Freakies Tree" that supplied them with nonstop cereal. Freakies disappeared after about five years but reappeared briefly about a decade later — this time, with honey-flavored spaceships and colorful monster marshmallows.

Nerds
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Nerds

By today's more health-conscious standards, it's hard to believe Nerds cereal ever existed. But exist it did, in its unabashedly sugary glory, with food coloring so intense that it could reportedly turn kids' poop red. Introduced by Ralston in 1985, each box actually contained two sleeves of flavored cereal — either orange and cherry, or grape and strawberry. "Which side are you gonna eat first?" the commercial asked. We'll tell you when we recover from our sugar coma.

Pink Panther Flakes
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Pink Panther Flakes

The best part of eating Post's Pink Panther Flakes, introduced in the early '70s, was watching the food coloring from this sugar-coated, neon pink cereal turn your milk pink. Of course, it was also hard to resist its eponymous mascot, the star of a long-running Saturday morning cartoon. An old Pink Panther Flakes commercial even riffed on the show's famous theme song.

Smurf Berry Crunch
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Smurf Berry Crunch

Sing it with us: "Smurf Berry Crunch is fun to eat … a Smurfy, fruity breakfast treat!" It was only a matter of time before the Smurfs, a Saturday morning cartoon staple of the '80s, were granted their own cereal. Made of fruit-flavored corn, wheat, and oat pieces shaped like flowers, Smurf Berry Crunch eventually spawned a spin-off: Smurf Magic Berries with marshmallows.

Sugar-Coated Rice Krinkles
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Sugar-Coated Rice Krinkles

Sold in the '50s and '60s, Post's Sugar Rice Krinkles was basically a sweeter version of Rice Krispies, but the cereal's Asian mascot, So-Hi, would never pass muster among advertising executives today. Post eventually pulled the plug, but used Sugar Rice Krinkles as a base for Fruity Pebbles, introduced in 1970.

Ice Cream Cones
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Ice Cream Cones

Sure, Ice Cream Cones may not have been the most nutritious breakfast choice, but we would still love to see this proudly sugary cereal back on store shelves. Made up of Kix-like spheres and adorable cones, it came in two flavors: vanilla and chocolate chip. The mascot was "Ice Cream Jones," an ice-cream man who made it his mission to sugar up kids.

Crispy Wheats 'n Raisins
Crispy Wheats 'n Raisins by ~ tOkKa (CC BY)

Crispy Wheats 'n Raisins

Crispy Wheats 'n Raisins was one of those rare cereals that really did stay crispy in milk. A General Mills cereal that first hit store shelves in 1979, it was positioned as an alternative to "soggy raisin bran." It had a great run, lingering for at least two decades. Devastated fans still implore General Mills for its return.

E.T.
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E.T.

Phone home if you remember this box of peanut butter and chocolate goodness. Introduced in 1984, E.T. cereal from General Mills was a given after the massive popularity of Steven Spielberg's film, "E.T." Its flavors were inspired by the lovable alien's famous fondness for Reese's Pieces.

Rice Honeys
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Rice Honeys

Rice Honeys only became Rice Honeys in the mid-'50s. Before then, this Nabisco cereal was known as Ranger Joe Rice Honnies. In the '70s, there were two more name changes: first to Winnie-the-Pooh Great Honey Crunchers, then to Klondike Pete's Crunchy Nuggets. Whatever you called them, we miss the sugary puffed rice pieces flavored with honey. The cereal even got its own shoutout on "Howdy Doody" and a limited-edition box promoting The Beatles' "Yellow Submarine" album in 1969 fetched some serious cash at auction a few years back.

Circus Fun
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Circus Fun

There was a lot going on in each box of Circus Fun, a General Mills cereal from the mid-'80s. There were fruit-flavored hoops and balls and several kinds of animal-shaped marshmallows. We're just jealous that the characters didn't parade into our room each morning like in the cereal's commercial — though the clown mascot was a bit creepy.