Bamba (snack)
Bamba (Hebrew: במבה) is a snack made of peanut-butter-flavored puffed maize manufactured by the Osem corporation in Kiryat Gat, Israel. Bamba is one of the leading snack foods produced and sold in Israel. It was introduced in 1964. Bamba makes up 25% of the Israeli snack market.
Peanut-butter-flavored Bamba | |
Course | Snack |
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Place of origin | Israel |
Created by | Osem |
Main ingredients | Peanuts, maize, Sunflower oil, salt |
Variations | Sweet Bamba, Nougat-filled Bamba, Halva-filled Bamba |
544 kcal (2278 kJ) | |
Similar products from other domestic manufacturers include "Parpar" (Literally "Butterfly", Telma, since 2000 a subsidiary of Unilever), "Shush" (Strauss-Elite), and "Smoki" (Štark). Osem named the snack "Bamba" because it sounded like baby talk.
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