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Food in the seventies
Cotton candy

The most incredible snack. Five cents a ball, a spoonful of sugar, and a bunch of cotton comes out. Cotton is edible and sweet!

God, this may be the thing I longed for most when I was a teenager.

Hawthorn leaf

Many people grew up eating it. A very successful hawthorn product can make people forget it after 20 years. Each sheet 1 cent.

Sour plum powder

It grinds sour plum into dry powder and puts it in a small packaging bag with a small spoon for digging and eating. Sweet and sour.

forzen sucker

It is actually an "ice" stick, except that ice is a stick. Absolutely authentic! 5 points each, so that every five hairs of the later "doll head" shocked heaven and man.

Rat feces

Well, it's just the opposite. It is specious, dark brown, like a very small cold capsule, each about two or three millimeters. It tastes sour and sweet. Maybe only people who want to commit suicide will take it by mistake.

Chewing gum

A long one, wrapped in red and white paper, has a little girl blowing bubbles on it. Before "Dada" was born, it was an absolute "big brother"!

fig

A small white bag with the words "fig" printed on it. It is filled with sour, sweet and dried figs. For a long time, I was puzzled by the appearance of figs. This thin dried silk is not like a flower at all, let alone a fruit. But why is it called fig?

deep-fried dough stick

At that time, the fried dough sticks were not called fried dough sticks, but sesame oil fruits. It is fried with pure fragrance, golden in color, crisp and delicious, and only costs five cents each.

Haw flakes

At that time, the packaging of hawthorn chips was very simple, a small bottle 10 chip. Thin slices, sweet and sour, cheap, suitable for all ages.