Anyone remember the Jello Whip N Chill?

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Oh yeah loved Great Shakes too

Remember the Great Shakes mixes very well and still have one of their brown two tone shakers. The shaker had the measure marked inside for the 8 oz of milk needed for each packet of mix. They surface at garage sales and in flea markets frequently. The had chocolate, vanilla, strawberry and chocolate fudge. I found the chocolate fudge too dark and even a little bitter. I thought it neat how the shake mix packets had triangular profiles. You could buy the shake mixes with the shaker and also buy refills of just the shakes mixes.

 
We had one of those shakers. I think it only ever got used once for its intended purpose, but my mom used it for all sorts of other things.
 
Talk about a trip down memory lane

Whip 'n Chill, Dreamwhip, Jello 123, Space Sticks, Shake a Puddin', Great Shakes.

The jingle, sounding like the Beach Boys, to Shake a Pudding is going through my head right now: Shake, Shake, Shake a pudding; pudding, pudding shake a pudding ...

Rob.
 
Jello 123

Well then, here's a timely entry from an MSN slideshow of discontinued products.

Jell-O 1-2-3 debuted in 1969, offering consumers a new wrinkle in homemade desserts. Jell-O gelatin itself was nothing new by that time; the product had been concocted in 1897. But what made this version of the product different was that once it was mixed with boiling water and set aside to cool, it would separate into three layers: a clear bottom, a chiffon middle and a creamy top.

After a few decades, the novelty may have worn off, and the product was discontinued in 1996 due to declining sales.

To console any remaining disappointed fans, Kraft recently added a recipe to its Web site showing how to make a similar dessert using sugar-free Jell-O and Cool Whip Lite.

scott55405++8-7-2009-02-03-22.jpg
 

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