Food & Drink

How a candy lover is bringing discontinued sweets back from the dead

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When Ellia Kassoff excitedly stopped into a California grocery store in 2009 to buy his favorite childhood candy, the initial euphoria quickly dissipated. The tech headhunter found Astro Pops, which he purchased by the box every few months, was out of stock. A few months later, he visited again, only to hear the startling news from the store’s manager: Astro Pops had been discontinued.

“I just couldn’t believe I was hearing those words,” Kassoff recalled.

So the next day, he called Spangler Candy, the Ohio company that previously made the conical-shaped sweet.  Its president at the time told him Astro Pops were discontinued because they were “no longer part of their marketing mix.”

“I kind of blurted out, ‘Would you sell the rights’ because I just couldn’t let my favorite candy die out. I wanted to see if I could save it,” Kassoff recalled. “And they said, ‘Yeah, we’ll sell it. We’re not doing anything with it.’ ”

And just like that, Kassoff owned his beloved Astro Pops. While he was now running a candy company, the 56-year-old executive was no stranger to confections.

Growing up, he and his family would visit relatives in New York and return home with bags of the latest sweets. His uncle, Ed Leaf worked for Leaf Brands, founded by his father and uncles in the 1920’s, which eventually grew into the fourth-largest candy company in North America with iconic staples such as Jolly Rancher and Milk Duds.

Tart 'N Tiny candies at the Sweet and Snacks Expo in Indianapolis in 2024.

Tart n’ Tinys on display at the Sweets and Snacks Expo in 2024.

Christopher Doering/Food Dive

 

Turning over a new Leaf

In 1996, Hershey acquired Leaf, and for a time, the 70-year-old brand suffered the same fate as Astro Pops did before Kassoff acquired the trademark rights to it.

Kassoff originally called his company Astro Pop, with the goal of keeping his beloved childhood candy alive. He had no intention of permanently giving up his career.

But Kassoff’s stance soon began to change. Increasingly, as he realized he “controlled the destiny of his favorite candy,” it became more fun. Kassoff began to wonder if other brands he enjoyed as a child that were no longer around that he could acquire. A permanent career shift soon occurred.

It wasn’t long before Kassoff realized that Leaf, despite being sold to Hershey two decades earlier, still had widespread recognition in the marketplace.

Kassoff eventually changed the company name to Leaf Brands, and he used it as a platform to build his snacking empire. Leaf eventually purchased Bonkers, Wacky Wafers, Tart n’ Tinys, among other candy offerings, along with cookie brand Hydrox.


“Can you imagine an executive at Hershey in a meeting saying, ‘I have a great idea for a new product, it’s called Farts.’ They would probably be fired. We have a major problem in our industry and that is the lack of creativity and fun.”

Ellia Kassoff

CEO, Leaf Brands


The company also created its own brand called Farts Candy, a chewy Nerd-like product. Now, most of the industry is controlled by four major candy companies, and because of their size, they are afraid to take any chances, Kassoff said. 

“Can you imagine an executive at Hershey in a meeting saying, ‘I have a great idea for a new product, it’s called Farts.’ They would probably be fired. We have a major problem in our industry and that is the lack of creativity and fun.” 

Leaf has largely stuck to working with brands that were previously on the market. Kassoff has heard from critics who said the brands he owns went away for a reason. But he counters that it wasn’t because consumers lost interest. The real reason, he says, is usually because of “corporate mismanagement,” like a change in the recipe, packaging or name.

“You can’t fault the product. You can fault the brand managers on these products,” he said. “My goal has always been to make sure I bring the candy back with the original formula and nearly identical packaging, that’s what consumers want.  That’s what they remember.”

Sweet success turns sour

Hydrox, which started in 1908, met its demise after owner Keebler changed the name to Droxies to distance the cookie from its chemical-sounding name, a combination of the words hydrogen and oxygen. It also made the cookie sweeter to go head-to-head with Oreo. Kellogg, which later acquired Keebler, removed Droxies from the market in 2003.

With Astro Pops, which began in 1962, the product failed four decades later largely because the stick used to hold it was moved, making the candy uncomfortable to suck on. 


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