Snacks & Candy

Nestle Rallies Nut Butter Bombs Available in Convenience Stores

3 flavors include Brownie Almond Butter, Salted Cashew Butter and Raspberry Peanut Butter
Nestle Rallies
Photograph courtesy of Nestle

ARLINGTON, Va. — Nestle revealed its Rallies Nut Butter Bombs are now available nationwide, with flavors including Brownie Almond Butter, Salted Cashew Butter and the newest addition, Raspberry Peanut Butter.

“As snacking and chocolate consumption have increased over the last two years, we know that consumers are seeking a balance between permissibility and indulgence,” said Jamie Harbeck, senior manager of innovation and strategy at Nestle.

The snack is chilled to preserve freshness and flavor, as they have no artificial flavors, colors or preservatives and less added sugar than the leading chocolate nut-butter treat, according to the Arlington, Va.-based company. They are made with real chocolate and real peanut, almond or cashew nut butters.

The flavors include the following:

  • Raspberry Flavored Peanut Butter: dark chocolate coating with a creamy peanut butter center dotted with real raspberry pieces
  • Brownie Almond Butter: filled with dark chocolate, almond butter and crunchy almond pieces and complemented by a creamy milk chocolate shell
  • Salted Cashew Butter: features a blend of cashew butter covered in dark chocolate

One package of Nestle Rallies contains three individual bite-sized nut butter bombs. The suggested retail price may vary but starts at $2.49 per unit.

In the United States, Nestle comprises eight businesses: Nestle USA, Nestle Waters North America, Nestle Nutrition, Nestle Professional, Nespresso, Nestle Health Science, Nestle Skin Health and Nestle Purina PetCare Co.

Members help make our journalism possible. Become a CSP member today and unlock exclusive benefits, including unlimited access to all of our content. Sign up here.

Multimedia

Exclusive Content

Mergers & Acquisitions

RaceTrac enters uncharted territory with its Potbelly acquisition

The Bottom Line: There has never been a purchase of a restaurant chain the size of the sandwich brand Potbelly by a convenience-store chain. History suggests it could be a difficult road.

Foodservice

Wondering about Wonder

Marc Lore's food startup is combining c-stores, restaurants, meal kits and delivery into a single "mealtime platform." Can it be greater than the sum of its parts?

Technology/Services

Most 7-Eleven rewards members use self-checkout but few use it every time

Faster transactions, shorter lines and ease of use drive interest, age-restricted items and technical issues still pose barriers

Trending

More from our partners