For example Dentyne Ice, comes in those blister packs, and the gum itself is coated in some sort of hard candy shell. That candy shell makes the gum store very well even left in a vehicle where the temperature and humidity vary widely.
My question is, why are only sugar free varieties of gum offered in this encased in a shell format?
thanks,
-rainy
Here’s hoping I’m wrong, because I’m tired of chewing gum going to hell in my truck in the summertime.
Standard gumballs (often sold in refill packs in toy stores/toy sections for home gumball machines) and Rain Blo brand gumballs (which I still see in convenience stores) are sugared candy-coated gums. There also seems to be a surfeit of candy-coated gums in egg shapes around Easter (including some tasty sour gums); check the seasonal foods sections in a month or two.
What brands of gum are “going to hell” when left in the truck? And exactly how bad do they get when “gone to hell”?
Just curious, never had this happen, but I don’t keep gum in the car. Or even chew gum anymore. Once I was out of highschool and it stopped being something you’d get yelled at for doing, most of the appeal wore off, lol.
If you can’t find a brand that fits what you’re looking for, maybe you could keep a small cooler or something in your truck and help preserve it better.
Any of the paper wrapped pieces, for example Wriggley’s Big Red. (I’ve seen the paper wrapped Dentyne do this too, so it must be the gum base that succumbs to the heat not just the sugar.) They begin to ‘weep.’ This saturates the paper wrapping, which is then effectively glued to them. If they continue this cycle, they turn into a mushy mess. If you’re keeping them in the console, they can make a real mess – and they’re worthless to chew. I used to be a real chewing gum addict, and went through it fast enough to avoid the problem. But a car parked in the sun in summer time can destroy a pack in maybe a couple of weeks.