I am from EU so I am entering for a collectible prize.
I don't eat lots of candy because I just don't feel good about eating almost pure sugar... Like I literally have some bags of candy left unopened from last Christmas that my mother sent me from Finland (she likes candy).
So here is my top:
1. Xylimax pastilles (peach-raspberry flavour) - these small pastilles are sweetened with Xylitol instead of sugar and they are actually good for your teeth so I can eat them with a good conscious. I don't think that they are the best tasting candy, but I have to put them in place one because they are the candy that I eat most frequently.
2. Jelly Beans - probably my favourite "normal" candy, I like how they are small and there are tons of flavours that you can combine. I think these are the only normal candy I'd truly consider buying.
3. Lakupala mansikka - finnish liquorice, this one in particular has a strawberry taste. I like the different flavoured liquorice, I love their texture and the taste isn't too sweet.
(Edited for typos since there is no rule against it here.)
I don't eat lots of candy because I just don't feel good about eating almost pure sugar... Like I literally have some bags of candy left unopened from last Christmas that my mother sent me from Finland (she likes candy).
So here is my top:
1. Xylimax pastilles (peach-raspberry flavour) - these small pastilles are sweetened with Xylitol instead of sugar and they are actually good for your teeth so I can eat them with a good conscious. I don't think that they are the best tasting candy, but I have to put them in place one because they are the candy that I eat most frequently.
2. Jelly Beans - probably my favourite "normal" candy, I like how they are small and there are tons of flavours that you can combine. I think these are the only normal candy I'd truly consider buying.
3. Lakupala mansikka - finnish liquorice, this one in particular has a strawberry taste. I like the different flavoured liquorice, I love their texture and the taste isn't too sweet.
(Edited for typos since there is no rule against it here.)