Rainbow Yanyan

Sunny

A happy meal since young, with its container, food and dips. The meiji Yan Yan is the epitome of childhood bliss, in such a simple meal of pretzel sticks (biscuit) and cream.


Yanyan (Tsukebo) (SGD 0.95)

From one's return to the supermarket shelf; 2011, has Yan Yan become like this? Why is it red with an animal on it? Looking at the illustration of the bear with its Yan Yan, it is a pack of coloured little dots. Moving on to the label at the top, it is also an assembly of colourful little dots. Is this the Yan Yan we know?


Uncover the silver foil. You will see three compartments in the set, your food, your dessert and side dish.


Dip them according to the food into the side dish then into dessert; as easy as gravity as chocolate cream sticking on to sprinkles, you will get yourself a rainbow Yan Yan.


Chocolate as we know, but as long as there is shellac/colour/flavouring; we don't care, it is rainbow. Tsukebo stands for dip-stick, the flavour of this biscuit, and the questions on the pretzel are arrowed towards the geography of japan.

P.S. Still talking about the have I taken all the sprinkles/chocolate dip before the biscuits are polished period?