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Motishon · 1 month ago
Chocolate Christmas Tree Cakes
When Chocolate Christmas Tree Cakes were absent from last year's lineup, fans feared for the worst. Had they suffered the same fate as the discontinued red velvet variety? According to a Little Debbie post on Facebook, the chocolate trees were not produced in 2024 due to a global cocoa shortage. Well, chocolate lovers, rejoice and be glad. The chocolate tree cakes are officially back.

With the announcement, excited followers took to Instagram to celebrate and declare the chocolate-flavored treats to be even better than the original. My take on the Chocolate Christmas Tree Cake is less enthusiastic. Three of the five snack cakes in my box (delivered directly from parent company McKee Foods) were smashed and broken around the edges. So first impressions were less than stellar. As for the overall eating experience, the cake's texture was crumbly and dry instead of moist, and its flavor was meek and mild instead of decadent. I wanted more from that chocolate creme filling than basic Hostess vibes. 

In-tact and fresh, I'm guessing one of these red-and-green sprinkled Christmas cakes could go a long way toward lifting your holiday spirits. One Redditor on r/junkfoodfinds recommends "warming them in the microwave for 10 seconds and eating with a small scoop of vanilla ice cream." With that in mind, I'd be willing to give the Chocolate Tree Cakes a second chance.
Motishon · 1 month ago
Christmas Cherry Cordials
Little Debbie Christmas Cherry Cordials present themselves most like a gift. The outer carton features an old-timey Santa along with cheerful red cherries, and a stout rectangular shape reminiscent of Queen Anne or Cella's chocolate candies. That's an honest hint at what's inside. I opened the box to find eight individually wrapped, and formidably sized sandwich cookies veiled in a thin chocolate coating. The vanilla discs underneath were soft, but a little too dry for my liking. Thankfully, the subtly sweet cherry creme filling helped smooth things over with legit bakery-cake frosting flavor. These would be even better with a glass of milk.

Little Debbie Cherry Cordials get extra points for daring to be a little different. I'm pretty fond of boxed chocolate-covered cherries (even the cheap drugstore variety), and this snack-cake spinoff captures the experience without being too cloying or artificial. However, cherry cordials turn up on America's worst Christmas candy lists all the time. If you're one of the haters, hold onto your $3 for a holiday snack further up on our list. As it is, some LD fans have had trouble locating these Cherry Cordials for years. You can try the Little Debbie online snack finder, but they weren't available anywhere within a 50-mile radius of my ZIP code.
Motishon · 1 month ago
North Pole Nutty Buddy Wafer Bars
In a season overflowing with caramel, peppermint, and Dubai chocolate everything, Little Debbie's North Pole Nutty Buddy treats offer a delicious diversion for fans of peanut butter. This festive spin on the brand's bestselling Nutty Buddy features the same iconic crisscross build, but the chocolate coating is replaced with milky white fudge and a red ribbon drizzle. 

Flavor-wise, these limited-time treats are mostly what you'd expect — and that's a wonderful thing. The wafers inside shatter to a delightfully light crisp with each bite. The peanut butter filling holds the layers together with a creamy, salty goodness. Compared to the bold, roasty original Nutty Buddy duos of the 1960s, the newfangled North Pole version is delicately sweet, bordering on (dare I say?) elegant. In Walmart.com reviews, some Little Debbie faithfuls are disappointed with the bar's slimmer, solo profile. But others appreciate that "it's easier not to eat too many" and "they're only 120 calories, so less guilt." Priced at around $3 for a box of 10, these bars deserve high praise for their picture-perfect, candy-striped looks. They'd really shine as a nostalgic stocking stuffer or filler on your holiday cookie tray.
Motishon · 1 month ago
Christmas Mini Muffins
Everyone loves a Christmas surprise, and these cheerful mini muffins stand out as an unexpected Little Debbie delight. The family-friendly carton comes with five perfectly portioned pouches, each holding four bite-sized treats. They're easy to open, and even easier to love. With one tear of the corner, you get fresh-baked notes of butter and vanilla. And when you take a bite, you might actually forget about the million things on your holiday to-do list for a moment.

Little Debbie Christmas Mini Muffins joined the holiday lineup in 2024, and they may be flying under your radar. In my area, they were the most widely available and well-stocked indulgence on our list. Sure, fast-food muffins can help get you through a season of hustle and bustle, but these cuties are even more convenient. Toss the pouches into work bags and school lunches (crumble-free), or unwrap and pile them onto a breakfast buffet. No, they're not gourmet. But for around $3, they're softly sweet and comforting, and I swear I caught hints of maraschino cherry. As one happy customer on Walmart.com put it: "These are so yummy!! [They] taste like mini pound cakes!! Well done, Little Debbie, well done!!"
Motishon · 1 month ago
Christmas Gingerbread Cookies
I'm generally more into gingerbread for the decorating than the eating, but these little guys changed my bah-humbug perspective. Compared to other packaged gingerbread cookies, the Little Debbie variety is chewy, soft, mildly spicy (yay), and deliciously versatile. There's just enough sweet white icing and festive razzle-dazzle to enjoy them right out of the package. But you could also gather your family and friends around the table to spruce them up. Offer candy eyes, mini M&Ms, and icing to create sweet gingerbread guy and gal faces. Or, flip the cookies upside down, and you've got the makings of gingerbread reindeer. I love that they're individually wrapped and just the right size for little hands (or smaller portions). 

Unwrapped and lined up on a party tray, I don't think anyone would guess — or care — these darlings come out of a $3 carton from the corner market. (Truth be told, you can even find them at Menards.) If you have no time to bake this December, no problem. Little Debbie Christmas Gingerbread Cookies hit all the nostalgic notes of storied gingerbread without the hassle of making them yourself.
Motishon · 1 month ago
Vanilla Christmas Tree Cakes
Little Debbie Vanilla Christmas Tree Cakes are just like those animated holiday reruns that never get old. It just wouldn't be Christmas without them. Each snack cake is a snowy-white frosted evergreen made with two layers of squishy, yellow sponge cake and a thick ribbon of vanilla creme in between. Yes, the icing is waxy-sweet, but that's the taste of unadulterated, retro joy. 

Now celebrating their 40th anniversary, Little Debbie Christmas Tree Cakes have really only changed in shape over the years. They started out as straight, basic triangles, but got a scalloped branch upgrade in 2012. The classic flavor — with its red garland stripes and crunchy green sugar lights — remains a predictable annual eating ritual for families across the country. And it's no exaggeration to say these OG treats have graduated from simple 1980s-era treat to full-blown holiday mascot, complete with themed non-edible merch. The Little Debbie website is loaded with Christmas collectibles (neckties, earrings, Hawaiian shirts, dog toys), as well as festive recipe ideas.
Motishon · 1 month ago
Snowflake Brownies
It would have been easy to put the beloved vanilla Christmas Tree Cakes in the top spot based on pure nostalgia alone. However, these newer Snowflake Brownies are by far the most beautiful and best-tasting holiday treat of the bunch. It all begins with Little Debbie's classic fudge brownie base, in a unique, hexagonal shape. On top, you get a decent layer of snow-white icing, a sparkle of blue sugar crystals, and a splendid stamped snowflake. The box of five brownies includes a variety of snowflake designs — they're not all the same!

Comparing the snowflake brownies to the tree brownies in flavor, the snowflakes are exceedingly more enjoyable. The distinction definitely stems from the different color icings and decorations. While the green trees tasted artificial, the white snowflakes were fudgy-rich and semi-homemade-level delicious. Unwrapped and with the box tossed to recycling, you could easily pass these brownies off as bakery-bought at your next holiday party. I also love that their wintry looks are not just for celebrating Christmas. I'm thinking of stashing a box in the freezer for that surprise late-season snow that always hits in March or April.
Motishon · 1 month ago
Skipping Rope
A skipping rope (or jump rope) is equipment used in sport and play that involves rhythmically jumping over a rope swung underfoot and overhead. The activity is practiced recreationally and competitively, with disciplines such as freestyle routines (featuring creative, combination techniques) and speed events (maximum jumps within timed intervals).
Skipping rope

A Ghanaian boy playing with a skipping rope
Type
toy
Availability
16th century–present

Boy jumping a long rope in Virginia
A child playing with a skipping rope in Japan
Accounts from the 16th century describe vine-jumping among Indigenous peoples, and by the 17th century, rope skipping had spread in Europe.[citation needed] Once treated as a gendered pastime, it became widely popular; in the 19th century it flourished in urban settings and children's street culture. Today the sport is overseen internationally by organizations such as the International Jump Rope Union (IJRU). Skipping rope is often used for cardiovascular fitness and coordination.
Motishon · 1 month ago
Jumping Jack
A jumping jack, also known as a star jump  and called a side-straddle hop in the US military, is a physical jumping exercise  performed by jumping to a position with the legs spread wide. The hands go overhead, sometimes in a clap, and then return to a position with the feet together and the arms at the sides.

Schoolchildren in the US performing jumping jacks.
The jumping jack exercise's origin has sometimes been erroneously identified as World War I U.S. General John J. "Black Jack" Pershing,[1] who is said to have developed it. The name comes from the jumping jack children's toy, which makes similar arm swing and leg splay motions when the strings are tugged.
Although he did not invent the exercise, the late fitness expert Jack LaLanne was credited for popularizing it in the United States. LaLanne used the jumping exercise during routines he promoted in decades of television fitness programming.[2]
Motishon · 1 month ago
Gray colocasia esculenta
English: Location taken: the National Arboretum, Washington DC. Names: Colocasia esculenta (L.) Schott, Alcocaz, Amadoembie, Amadumbe, Amateke, Arum, Bai Bon, Black Magic, Black Taro, Bon, Bon Chin Dam, Bon Nam, Callaloo, Coco Yam, Cocoyam, Colocasia, Colocasie, Dachine, Dalo, Dasheen, Daun Keladi, Edda, Eddo, Eddoe, Eddy Root, Elephant Ear, Elephant´s Ear, Elephant´s-Ear, Elephant's Ear, Elephant's-Ear, Gabi (gulay), Giant Elephant Ear, Gölevez, Green Taro, Gwaza, Inhame, Inhame-Branco, Inhame-Da-áfrica, Inhame-Da-Costa, Kalo, Katchu, Khoai Môn, Khoai Nc, Khoai nước, Kolokasie, Kolokázie jedlá, Kolokazja jadalna, Kontomire, Madumbe, Malanga, Pheuak, Phuak (Phueak), Poi, Potato of the Tropics, Purple-Leaf Taro, Sato Imo, T´a Ro T´o Ran, Taaro, Taioba-De-São-Tomé, Talas (Indonesia), Talo, Taro, Taro Potato, Tayoba, Valgomoji kolokazija, Wild Taro, Yamswurzel, Yu, Yu Tou, Таро (растение), अरबी सब्जी, अळू, कच्छु, কচু, અળવી (વનસ્પતિ), ಕೆಸು, ചേമ്പ്, താള്, ტარო (ტროპიკული მცენარე), サトイモ, 芋, 토 Classification: Plantae > Magnoliophyta > Liliopsida > Alismatales > Araceae > Colocasieae > Colocasia > Colocasia esculenta.
Date	10 September 2005
Source	source: David Stang. First published at ZipcodeZoo.com
Author	Photo by David J. Stang
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