Does anyone remember Peek Frean's Playbox Cookies? As a kid these were my favourite. I thought the Canadian version was called "Toybox" cookies and the images weren't quite as ornate as these...maybe just simple musical intruments and such. But it was 30 or more years ago (yikes!) and now I'm not sure. Anyhow, I came across this old tin at a garage sale in Hawkesbury last Sunday. Does anyone remember these?
I only wanted the pink ones. I seem to recall that Larry liked these too. And I think they only were rectangular... You were very, very little then (after all, you are soooo much younger than Larry and me)... and I think you got stuck with the yellow ones? It all rings a faint bell... xxoo
ReplyDeleteYes, that is what my Mom kept her buttons in. Now, to find one.....
ReplyDeleteI have no memory of them but they sure look good. Why can't things be so colourful and inviting now?
ReplyDeleteYes, I do remember a tin of these sent by my Scottish gran when I was about 8 years old...and that's more than 30 years ago! Way more. And yes, they were so good and so pretty.
ReplyDeleteAnother memory -- we used first to lick off the icing picture, and then the icing underneath and then eat the cookie. Do you remember that?
ReplyDeleteYeah, Marci I do sort of remember that. And as I recall they were rectangular in shape and Mom bought them in a paper package that was also rectangular and they sat side-by-side so no room for ovals. And don't you remember the images being simple things like drums and bugles? Not as elaborate as on this tin. Maybe the ones we had were made in Canada?
ReplyDeleteYes! And I can taste them now as I think about them. I must have been pretty young when I had them. Funny what we remember.
ReplyDeleteOh my, what memories. I remember them exactly. Even eating the icing when I normally don't go for any kind of icing. We had at least 2 tins in the house. Wonder where they are now... I can't believe my mother threw them out. She's still saving empty Country Crock margarine tubs and aluminum pie plates. Just in case....
ReplyDeleteI hadn't thought of them in years. I want some RIGHT NOW.
ReplyDeleteP.S. Love the latest issue!
Dusty
I didn't get mine yet.
ReplyDeleteWow, this post really brought back memories. Like Marcia, I used to love licking the icing off before demolishing the cookie.
ReplyDeleteI am now officially embarking on a quest to re-create these biscuits, and found this posting as part of my initial forays into on-line resources. I think that's an antique box; my recollection from the 1970 in England was a more rectangular box. I was having a moment of reverie about them and wrote this a few weeks ago: http://www.chucklehut.org/index.php/site/ind/the_hard_dunk_a_love_that_never_fades/. If you've got an idea how to recreate them, please let me know - and I bet you'd make some great stencils for the icing, too!
ReplyDeleteI loved Playbox cookies as a child. I just tweeted on Twitter to ask Peek Frean to bring them back - maybe if enough people tweet or retweet this request, Peek Frean will listen. It worked with Cadbury and one of their products.
ReplyDeleteLikely the most vivid "food" memory of my childhood. I tried explaining Playbox to my wife who was a few years younger and thus missed out enjoying these wonderful cookies. Some years later she found an empty Playbox tin and gave it to me for my birthday. Removing the lid, the aroma of the cookies was still there! Now divorced, she has the tin, but I have the memories.
ReplyDeleteI can even taste them now. Our mother use to buy them for us off and on when as railway brats we lived in the various cities across Canada. Beth Bayley
ReplyDeleteHi I love Playbox cookies and have asked a few years ago for Peek Freans Canada to bring them back. The girl didn't know what I was talking about. Hopeless. Anyway a Fox's Party Ring cookie is very close. They are great. Make some plain cookies and cover them with Royal Icing and that should do it, or buy Fox's Party Rings from the UK.
ReplyDeleteOMG!! Just found this site while researching info about the cookies for my novel - my brother and I used to sneak into the kitchen at 6 a.m. to eat these!!
ReplyDeleteSo I'm not the only one with fond memories - and they really did exist :)
my mom used to buy "toy box" cookies at Woodwards Food Floor downtown Vancouver. I agree with blog above - I thought they were toy box not play box. The Cdn ones were very simple - white, yellow?, pink, chocolate - and quite small. I remember that they never tasted as good as they looked! (as in the pink was not strawberry, it was just hard icing, etc) But it would be fun to have cookies like that again. I always wondered how they "stencilled" the toy outline on to the cookie top. What kind of machine did that?
ReplyDeleteMy fav cookie is Peak Freans digestive - and if it has to have choc on it, it would be the milk choc version
oh - i just had a flashback since posting my prev comment (directly above) -- the ones we bought at Woodwards in Vancouver were for sure Play Box (or Playbox) -- not "toy box" ... this seems odd how I remember but someone in our kid gang thought it was funny to call them play boy cookies - we all thought that was totally gaggingly funny and very risque(kid humor)
ReplyDeleteI still have and use a Playbox tin that I had as a kid. Man, how I used to love those!
ReplyDeleteMom bought them at Dominion, in Toronto, Ontario.
It is so nice to see other people who remember and loved these cookies!I used to buy mine at Safeway in North Vancouver,BC. I have not seen them since the late 70's, but it sure would be nice if Peek Freans brought them back.Perhaps a petition ???
ReplyDeleteOh you bet! It would be FANTASTIC to be able to buy these again! In 1952-1953 then again in 1957, our Mom took my older brother and me by ocean liner from Quebec City to England. More so in ‘57, I clearly remember my Granny and Granddad and Mom letting us have these cookies for our afternoon tea. I loved them!! And I have been searching for the name of them for ages. So glad I found this site!! I couldn’t recall their name. I don’t remember Mom buying them in our small NW Quebec mining town but we sure had our fill in England! And Granny would send us big boxes every few months that contained English sweets, English comics like Bill and Ben the Flowerpot Men plus a new publication of a book called Rupert the Little White Bear which we loved in England in ‘57. I can recall rummaging in the box to find a tin of these Playbox cookies’ which was one of our favourite things in the big box. Oh, the sweet memories!!
DeleteI also remember them being called ToyBox Cookies, but then that may just have been what we called them. They came in a rectangular package with a glossy, shiny paper wrapper. I can actually smell them when I look at the picture, and the icing was like no other cookie, good for licking off first before eating. I was raised in Toronto and I know my Mum bought them at the local grocery store there in the 1950s and into the 60s. I have no recollection of when I last saw them for sale in the stores. Nice memories. Thanks for posting the picture.
ReplyDeleteIt's so interested to see this because I have often thought about Playbox Cookies and wondered if I had imagined them. I remember licking them until the picture went away and then scraping the rest of the hard icing off with my teeth. I don't think I cared too much about the cookie after that.:)
ReplyDeleteI still have a Playbox tin from around 1965, also one of my earliest and best food memories. Our friends visiting from Bermuda gave them to us. You're right, the designs were such things as bugles, drums, clowns, soldiers, clocks, ships, trucks, etc and the stencils were a little less intricate than the ones in the photo. The cookie shapes were round, square, and hexagonal ...with very pretty colours. I also wish Peek Frean's still sold them!
ReplyDeleteI love it! Yes, I remember them very well, and now that I've had a look at the box, I do recognize some of the designs on them. Like Marci and others have said, the whole fun was in licking off the icing first. What I wouldn't give to have one just one more time.
ReplyDeleteI can taste them now! A petition would be good. Meanwhile, I am sending the link to this blog to Peak Frean. I hope you don't mind. It's almost a petition already.
ReplyDeleteMum's friends used to send these to us from England. I found some in a NYC grocery store in the late 70s; have not seen them since. Loved these and Iced Gems! Similar hard icing.
ReplyDeleteI miss these cookies like crazy! I would love to hear more stories about them. I remember having favorites, but I don't recall clearly what they were. I have a tin! But it has rocks in it :(
ReplyDeleteOnly had these on special occasions like birthdays. That would have been in the mid 1960's. We use to buy them at Dominion in Scarborough.
ReplyDeleteI would just love to find these cookies again. Has anyone had any luck getting them. Pete's Boutique in Halifax would be a great place to ask. That Pete knows everything
ReplyDeleteOh my goodness...I have asked so many people if they remember these cookies and no one did. I started thinking I imagined them! Ours were the plainer ones..pink, yellow, brown, with drums and soldiers etc. Thanks for clarifying that I'm not crazy LOL
ReplyDeleteI loved Playbox cookies as a child. I remember having them at my birthday parties. So glad to have found out other people remember them too because I too hadn't found anyone who remember them! Anyone heard if Peek Frean has ever come out with Playbox cookies again? I would love to get them for my daughter.
ReplyDeleteCheryl
I still have a Peek Frean’s Playbox biscuit tin from around 1970 and would like to reproduce these biscuits! Any ideas how one could make a stencil of the figures let alone lay them on the first icing? Hmmm? The Peek Frean brand is owned in the UK by United Biscuits. Cheers, Tim
ReplyDeleteI do remember these great little treats. I have found some very similar.They are ring shaped, but do taste as good as the original playbox cookies. I got them in a little candy shop outside of Edmonton, in Alberta Can. They don't get them all the time so I scoop what ever I can get when they have them. Today the owner said she is going to check into the playbox cookies to see of the are still making them and will order some if so.
ReplyDeleteSheryl
My Grandmother brought a light blue round tin of these cookies from London for us in the 70's then my mom would sometimes find them for us in Michigan where we grew up. I started a cookie business 20 years ago with Playbox cookies in mind. When I walk into our office when the ovens are on, it smells just like the tin of cookies! The cookies I make are larger and not sold in tins except at the holiday times and we don't stencil our designs, they are done by hand. www.omygoodness.com
ReplyDeleteI remember them and my sister in Blenheim Ontario has a box I gave her as a gift ( with cookies of course) in the late 60s. Curiously enough, before seeing this blog I had sent an email to the Peek Frean Company (Kraft) to ask when was the last year they made them
ReplyDeleteand why they stopped. I received an answer from someone responsible for replies saying thank-you but they have no records of their past products. I don't believe that and am pushing for an answer. I agree we should do a petition to get them made again. How will we do it? Who wants to begin the process? Ronna? (I am in Canada by the way, New Brunswick)
Margaret, I a with you!!! I have been searching to find these cookies for years and of course I wont find them. If I ever find a tin I would feel gifted!!! I am going to write to the UK company and see why they cant give us more details and why they wont bring them back! Now as a grandmother, I truly believe my kids and my kids kids have been cheated! Mom made chicken rice soup (measel soup we called it), butterscotch pudding and playbox cookies for lunch almost every day. Gosh I miss those lunches and my mom. What great cookies; what great memories. Catharine Allen
ReplyDeleteI grew up in Montreal and my grandmother in Point Clair (Montreal suburb) always had Toybox cookies in the late 60's. I have only met one other person who has had them, she was my best friend in grade school. So, where is this petition? If this many of us still daydream about these cookies, I bet many, many more people would be interested.
ReplyDeleteI tooooo loved these cookies! What I wouldnt give to have them again..I'm 52, grew up in Hamilton, Ontario & my Mom bought them weekly & we devoured them..I thought they were so pretty ...I can taste & smell them just looking at the pictures! I would love that tin although i dont believe thats how they were packaged here in Ontario...bring them back!!! best childhood memories those cookies..my Mom passed just over a year ago & these cookies make me think of her...she knew how much we loved them & made sure they were always in the house!
DeleteMy friend and I were in a British import store yesterday and we saw the Fox's Ring Cookies. We were both reminded of some colouful cookies we enjoyed as children back in the 1950's, but we couldn't remember what they were called. After some web browsing, I came across a photo of Playbox cookies and your blog.
ReplyDeleteI am all in favour of a petition to get these cookies back on store shelves. I know my three grandkids would love them just as much as I did!
Loved them!!! I have such fond membories of eating Toybox Cookies as a kid. I don't remember them being in a tin, but in a rectangular package. My sister and I wanted the one with the cat image on it the most. When I remember them I can smell and taste them and am craving them like crazy. I don't know where my mother bought them, but we grew up in Welland, Ontario.
ReplyDeleteMy siblings and I would each get a box of Playbox cookies (though we referred to them, much to our mom's horror, as Playboy cookies)in our stockings at Xmas. I think Mom got them at the local Red & White.
ReplyDeleteI remember my Auntie serving them to all us children at birthday parties and other special celebrations in the 1950s. My Auntie was a British war bride, and she recently passed away in her 90's. She always called us her "duckies". This was the only time I remember having these delightful cookies. I was especially entranced by the stencils.
ReplyDeleteSo nice to find others who remember these cookies. We grew up in Edmonton, Alberta.
My Grandmother used to give these to us grandkids. I also remember them not being so inticate and also not so brightly colored. Wonder if Peak Frens still makes them??
ReplyDeleteI have this tin on a display shelf. We used to love them as kids 45-50 years ago!
ReplyDeleteMy sister sent me this website. She and I grew up in Northern Ontario in the town of Haileybury and my mother bought us these cookies as a treat. We absolutely loved them and it brings back many memories to see them pictured on the tin box. We knew them as Playbox, not Toybox, cookies. I would love to be able to buy them for my grandchildren. Perhap we should all be contacing Peak Freans to encourage a re-issue of them, even just a onetime memorial edition for people like us.
ReplyDeleteMaybe we need to do something on Facebook? See how many likes - or whatever it is one does to make things happen! Then send it on to Peak Freans. It's been 50 years since I had one, but I still crave them ;)
ReplyDeleteLove reading these comments. I couldn't remember the name of them, but remember a lot of pink hard icing. I also remember a coffee cream cookie that Peak Freans made. You'd think with the popularity of coffee that they would bring them back too. I would buy both if they were available.
ReplyDeleteWould absolutely love to see these cookies brought back again. My Mum bought tins of them for special occasions like Christmas or birthdays in the 1960s. The tins had the various shapes of cookies. The packages only had the rectangular ones. I haven't seen them in the stores since about 1976. A number of people seem to remember the name as toy box cookies. I was always familiar with the name play box cookies, which is the name shown on the tins, but I'm beginning to wonder if perhaps there was some other company manufacturing a knock off. Haven't been able to find anything on line, though.
ReplyDeleteI wanted to know the same thing my two sons are now 51 and 44 and when we get together they still talk about these cookies that my mother would buy them. they loved them they said they where the best cookies ever and wished they could get some for their kids to try
I remember a line of PF cookies called Wedgewood which were like Playbox but were iced with a Wedgewood blue icing.
ReplyDeleteI have the same tin as in your photo. It must be from the early 60's because it says 'By appointment to the late King George VI on the tin lid. I don't remember what they tasted like, but they were a treat for the eyes!
ReplyDeleteI do. It was my very favorite biscuit tin, because the biscuits were so colorful and pretty and I could line up the matching edges along the lid and base! We had one from England in the early-mid 1960's. I am sad that it was lost somehow when my mother moved house about 20 years ago.
ReplyDeleteThis was the tin in Canada. The cookie were just as shown. This is an extremely rare tin. I found one and you are lucky to have done so. Hang onto it or price it well on ebay int'l. as you'll get lots of offers. Good luck! PS: Makes a great button box!
ReplyDeletePeak Freans Playbox cookies were sold in Canada under that name...I totally remember them from the 1970s. They were in a rectangular box and the cookies were square. I recall the alphabet letters, the horn, and the drum. They were my favorite cookies! I was so sad when they were discontinued. Fox's Mini Party Rings will give you the texture and the hard icing glaze of the Playbox Cookies, but sadly, not the flavor...
ReplyDeleteI grew up in Ottawa, and near Montreal. I don't remember the name, but I remembered they were Peek Freans. I remember them in a shiny paper sack, with the pictures printed on the exterior. I only remember rectangular ones, but in my memory, the pictures are stencils of nursery rhymes. Jack- be Nimble was alwayys on chocolate. I remember Hickory Dickory Dock, and Humpty Dumpty, and Jack and Jill as well. I have been trying to find these for years, for my own kids, and now my grandchildren. Wretched conglomerate corporations!
ReplyDeleteThe machinery was highly specialised, and very old, too difficult to maintain, but with modern computer technology, it should be easy to replicate these wonderful treats. The food colouring may have been a problem as well.
I loved those cookies, they were also available in a tube type rectangular packaging. They were covered in pink frosting with either toys or ladies cameos stamped on them. My brother has been complaining for years about them being discontinued, so I am going to try to recreate them as a Christmas present for him. I am going to start with a sugar cooky base and fondant for the topping. I picked up some cooky stamps recently. wish me luck I'm starting my first experiment tomorrow!!!!
ReplyDeleteThese cookies were the best! Have found a few recipes for the icing and have tried to duplicate them but never quite as good as I remember.
ReplyDeleteWe used to have these cookies every Christmas as a special treat. They came in many shapes, a thin hard cookie with a thin coating of coloured hard icing and a simple nursery rhyme image of white icing. We were not fond of the red icing because it seemed to have a bitter after-taste, but we ate all colours anyway. The most fun we had was trying to be the first to guess what nursery rhyme was depicted. We had the Playbox nursery rhyme cookies about 50+ years ago, so maybe the most recent cookies had different designs.
ReplyDeleteLoved these cookies as a child. Wish I could find them now! Mo
ReplyDeleteI brought a tin with me from England in '77, and foolishly gave it to my sister who had two small children at the time. She lived in Alexandria, so your tin might even be the one!
ReplyDeleteI loved these cookies - even as a teenager and young adult, and so did my Dad! I was in England last year and looked for them, but the closest I could get was "Party Rings" which are a donut-shaped biscuit with a hard icing on top in pastel colours, and a wavy pattern in white. Not as good, but still made by PF.
I loved these cookies, I used to break off a piece and put the sugar side down onto my tongue and just let it dissolve....mmmmmm
ReplyDeleteSo, after an Internet search...
today I bought a package of "Bakers Iced Zoo Biscuits" (they are a South African company - do the Google). These look very much like playbox but with zoo animals.
I got them at a store called "Eat Sum More" located at 7700 Bathurst Street, Thornhill, Ont. below is a link. They also do mail order.
http://www.eatsummore.com/product/bakers-iced-zoo-biscuits
I haven't tried them yet, waiting for the right occasion.
To Mary Barr
ReplyDeleteDid you try them yet? What did you think?
Yes, I did try them... Not the same flavour, a bit too floral for my liking, though they are very pretty and unusual; the "animals" are actually white icing appliqués that lay on top of the coloured glaze. None the less they were a hit with my son's girlfriend who took them to a party where they were completely devoured.
ReplyDeleteOur search goes on..... :)
Yes, we did try them. Not the same, they had a very floral flavour and the animals are icing appliqués.
ReplyDeleteNot really a disappointment because they are really another unique type of cookie.
My search continues :)
Thank goodness I found these on the web. I have been wondering about them for over 50 years since we had them as children in the late 1950s in Beirut in Lebanon. Peek Freans must have been quite active in the local market as I remember several things coming from them including tinned Christmas puddings in about the right shape. Like many others I recall the pleasure of scraping the icing off with my teeth and then finishing off the unremarkable biscuit beneath.
ReplyDeleteThe galleon design was my favourite.
Well, I`m 70 (seventy!) and I remember them from when I was a kid. I was reminded of them because lately I have seen a video of someone doing an incredible decoration of beautiful flowers and a lace design on a large cookie (about as big as her hand, I think! I would give you the URL but it doesn`t seem to work for me, and its shares have gone from under 10 million to over 21 million -- in a single DAY! You`ll probably see it.
ReplyDeleteI would like to suggest that the person who initiated this thread send it, whole cloth, to Peek Frean`s, which I think is in England, so they can see there is some demand! The ones I remember were nursery rhyme characters and, I think, a little simpler than what I see here!
Try this link for the cookie decorating video:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.techinsider.io/cookie-decorating-video-facebook-2016-3
Pretty amazing! Too pretty to eat ;)
OMG!! I've been trying to remember the name of this cookie for 45 years. We would have them at special times and I loved them. My sister just posted a picture of a tin she found in an antique store in Huntsville, Ontario. I had tears in my eyes!! So many happy memories associated with these cookies. I really wish they'd make them again. I've even told my kids about these magical cookies we used to have as children. Sigh.
ReplyDeleteI wonder if anybody has thought about sending this blog to Peek Frean`s? They might make them again if we told them there was still so much enthusiasm for them! It is said that one letter (though maybe not one email, as they are easier towrite) represents 200 people, so that that rate, we represent 13,800 interested people!
ReplyDeleteFinally, I have found these. Kindergarten in ?1951, whoever sat beside the teacher, me, please, picked pink, and I thought ours had a cameo figure on them. I have such a nostalgic craving for that flavour. Would not that recipe be in the Peek Freans archives somewhere?
ReplyDeleteWell, about getting recipes from Peek Frean, you have nothing to lose by asking! May I suggest, however, that you look up Cookie Decorating and do some for yourself? There are some fascinating videos there, which make it look so-o-o easy. You could just start with a "good" cookie recipe and decorate it yourself!
ReplyDeleteI have been trying to find a picture of these cookies that I loved so much as a child. I tried to describe them to my mom and my sister but they didn’t know what I was talking about. Finally found some people who do know! My grandma used to buy them in Vancouver (probably from Woodward’s}. I loved the pictures and the colours and I dream about the taste. Nothing like them since. I was so excited to see the picture of them as so many memories came flooding back. Probably some of my earliest and favourite food memories! I too wish they would bring them back. A whole new generation to love them, and all of us who fondly remember them.
ReplyDeleteOh my, i’ve been craving these for years. My mother would buy for my 3 sons, and truth be told, i ate more than i should have. Are they still being made, and does anyone know how to make these?
ReplyDeleteIrene
Irueckwart44@gmail.com
I don`t think Peek Frean`s make these any more – in fact
ReplyDeleteI haven`t seen any in Canada for years. They make other
styles, but nothing as fancy as the Nursery Rhyme ones!
Well, I'm reading this Dec. 2, 2018...I had tried for YEARS to find the Playbox cookies that appeared in our Christmas stockings from 1955-1965, for my own children. They were colourful and the designs were more childlike than the beautiful ones that one sees on the tins. The ones we got in our stockings were in rectangular packages...simple, but loved the colourful icings: peach, lemon yellow, pink, pastel green. I now live on Vancouver Island and would LOVE to find out where to buy this nostalgic treat...now...for my grandsons!!
ReplyDeleteHelp anyone? Where can one buys Playbox cookies in Victoria,BC or even Vancouver, BC??
I`m pretty sure they don`t exist any more, especially as no-one appears to have seen any for about 60 years. I think they were a onetime effort by Peek Frean. I think someone from this forum even sent Peek Frean a copy of this forum so that they would know there was still some interest in those cookies, but I don`t think they chose to do any more!
ReplyDeleteA sleeve of these wonderful cookies was in my Christmas stocking each year. I would make them last for weeks, scraping off the icing with my teeth first, then slowly nibbling the cookie base. I can remember their taste exactly. I think Santa probably got them from Woodward’s Park Royal or downtown Vancouver.
ReplyDeleteHas anyone found them. In Calgary Glamorgan bakery makes a decent iced cookie, but you'd have to leave them out for a long time to harden them like a playbox cookie.
ReplyDeleteNice Post. Thanks for sharing the valuable information with us.
ReplyDeletePlayBox Online
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Yup !!!!!! I love these cookies my favorite !!! I used to gnaw off all the cookie first and then eat the icing while gnawing trying to keep the icing picture in one piece. Bring them back ..... Still my favorite!
ReplyDeleteDoes Peak Frean still make this cookie
ReplyDeleteA few years ago, I did find 1 pkg of these cookies, in a little country store in Melbourne ON Canada, I couldn't believe it, They must have been at least 10 years old, but I bought them any way and they seemed as I had remembered them, Not stale in the least,
I remember my Mom would allow us 1 after supper, if we finished our supper, Worth every bite we ate before for the reward.
I do not know how to use gmail, Could you please reply to lechevalc1@aol.com? thanks
I spoke to a woman at the factory year ago, with the hopes of seeing these cookies again. She told me that they are gone for good as they had just thrown out all the dies they used to make these beautiful treasures. What a world we live in and who makes these stupid decisions?
ReplyDeleteI'm with those who remember these as birthday-party treats, but little bit simpler, rectangular and in cheaper packaging. I can state without any doubt that if ours had come in a nice useful tin like that, we would have saved it! (Based on the number of Chock Full O' Nuts coffee cans and Koogle jars we had around the house...)
ReplyDeleteI agree with the idea that maybe a rival company might have done their own version, and that might be why people remember the Toybox name.
Do a Google search on Peek Freans Playbox cookies vintage, and I think you will find the ones you remember? The picture you posted is a later version of the Playbox cookies, I think???
ReplyDeleteFor those who wondered... I did send an email to the Canadian producer of Peak Frean cookies (the company was sold to several different companies who each produce the Peak Frean cookies in the Us and Britain as well) and stated that there was a real interest in their producing the Ice Box cookie that I remember so well in the 50's. Here's hoping.....
ReplyDeleteWouldn't that be wonderful?! Our grandsons would be able to experience the magic of Playbox cookies!
ReplyDeleteI remember these, too. I only had them at a friend's apt.
ReplyDelete(in Toronto). I think her family might have sent them to her from England. Does anyone remember Golden Wheat cookies? I really liked them, but have not seen them in ages. No icing, but there was an embossed border around an image of wheat fields.
Yes, I remember them being Toybox here - Vancouver, B.C., Canada. Loved them as a kid. Could eat through them like crazy. Still miss that particular flavour. Have tried to find it elsewhere but not the same.
ReplyDeleteI fondly remember having these cookies as a treat at my grandmother’s house. The cookies were works of art. I loved the smooth icing surface. Licking off the icing and demolishing the cookie…so good. I wish Peek Freen would bring back this childhood favourite!
ReplyDeleteMy favorite was one with pink or purple frosting and had a trumpet. They were so good.
ReplyDeleteI found a reference to these cookies in a book I am reading by Alexander McCall Smith set in Botswana, and it brought back such poignant memories! How many times through the years have I yearned for those pretty cookies! Where is that petition for their return?? My online search for them brought me to this site—thank you! Susan in Kamloops, BC
ReplyDelete