• 4 months ago
Oh, Canada. Welcome to WatchMojo, and today we’re counting down our picks for beloved products that were once available in Canada but have disappeared for one reason or another.

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00:00When pizza's on a bagel, you can eat pizza anytime!
00:04Welcome to WatchMojo, and today we're counting down our picks for beloved products that were
00:09once available in Canada, but have disappeared for one reason or another.
00:13Another pizza delivery.
00:14Not delivery, it's delicio.
00:17Number 10, Stouffer's.
00:19It's a busy Monday, and you don't have time to make yourself a decent meal.
00:22You open the freezer and look for a Stouffer's lasagna to get you through the day.
00:26At Stouffer's, it's what's on the inside that counts.
00:28That's why our lasagna is made with high-quality ingredients you would use at home.
00:32Like freshly made pasta, real mozzarella, and no preservatives.
00:36Just a delicious meal the way you'd make it.
00:39Unable to find one, you head down to your local grocer to snatch one out of the freezer,
00:43only to find they have disappeared entirely.
00:46Stouffer's mac and cheese is made with 100% real cheese.
00:51So creamy.
00:53So cheesy.
00:54Nestle, the parent company of Stouffer's, announced in early 2023 that it was pulling
00:59several of its products off Canadian shelves.
01:01Among them were Stouffer's entrees and both Lean Cuisine and Life Cuisine.
01:06Dig in to lunch.
01:07Dig in to Lean Cuisine.
01:09Lean Cuisine has cheddary, cheesy goodness in every bite.
01:13The company cited a need to put more money and effort into products it wishes to prioritize
01:17as the reasoning.
01:19Number 9, Little Swiss and Little Debbie.
01:21There's nothing like a tasty pastry when you're hankering for a snack.
01:25Meal cream pies, Swiss rolls galore, zebra cakes, nutty buddy, honey bun, and more.
01:36Little Swiss and Little Debbie have been helping Canadians quench their thirst for a snack
01:40for many years.
01:41That is, until 2022, when they vanished from store shelves.
01:46Everybody loves the brownies we make.
01:47Parent company McKee Foods reported that their sole distributor of the product in Canada
01:52had chosen to shut its business down permanently.
01:54Although they could have chosen to find a new distributor, McKee opted not to.
01:58The Little Debbie Swiss Roll, a splendid swirl of cake and cream.
02:02Until the company changes their mind.
02:04Canadians will have to cross over into the U.S. if they get a craving for those beloved
02:08mini cakes.
02:09Number 8, Bonamine.
02:11You might have the strongest constitution in the world, but everyone at some time gets
02:16a little queasy.
02:17Whether it's from motion sickness or the rise and fall of a boat you're on, no one
02:22enjoys feeling like they're about to lose their lunch.
02:24Medications such as Dramamine are commonly used to combat this very type of condition.
02:28In Canada, an alternative known as Meclizine, sold under the brand Bonamine, was formerly
02:34available as an anti-nausea medication.
02:36For reasons not readily known, the manufacturer stopped producing the medication in Canada,
02:42while it still remains available throughout the U.S.
02:46Number 7, Skippy Peanut Butter.
02:48It might be a popular brand in other countries like the United States, but in Canada, Kraft
02:52Peanut Butter tends to rule the store shelves.
03:04Heavily promoted by the company and adored by many Canadians, there's no other major
03:09brand of peanut butter that stands out in Canada like Kraft.
03:13So, it doesn't come as much of a surprise that Skippy Peanut Butter had a hard time
03:17finding a place among Canadian consumers.
03:19Just remember to take life one spoonful at a time and go!
03:26Hormel Foods, the owners of Skippy, cited a lack of profits and tough competitors as
03:31its biggest reasons for pulling the brand from stores in 2017.
03:34120 million jars of Skippy Peanut Butter are sold annually.
03:38That's about four jars every second.
03:41In other words, Skippy produces enough peanut butter each year to make two billion peanut
03:47butter and jelly sandwiches.
03:49Number 6, Ragu Pasta Sauce.
03:51You walk into a local grocery store, wander down to the pasta aisle, and stare at the
03:56endless array of options for sauces.
04:02Most stores will carry their own store brand, along with countless other well-known variations.
04:07With so many options available to consumers, it's no surprise that famed pasta sauce brand
04:12Ragu walked away from Canadian stores.
04:17Ms. ConAmerica Inc., the owners of the brand, gave a rather vague reason for the departure,
04:22citing a desire to amalgamate some of their brands to help drive competition.
04:26Thankfully, Canadians still have plenty of options,
04:30and can always make a trip down south to pick up more Ragu.
04:33There's nothing like the taste of Ragu Spaghetti Sauce.
04:36Number 5, Bagel Bites.
04:38When you think of frozen pizza, you likely think of a 12-inch-ish sized pie that you
04:43throw into the oven for an easy meal.
04:45Now you can feel good about giving them pizza whenever they want.
04:48If that's too much, you might cook a mini pizza, which isn't much bigger than the palm of your
04:53hand.
04:53Bagel Bites sought out those who'd want to enjoy the taste of pizza in literally a few bites.
04:58Pizza on a bagel, we can all agree with that.
05:01Combining pizza toppings on a small bagel, you had a great little snack.
05:05So it left many Canadians surprised when Kraft Heinz pulled them out of Canadian stores in 2022.
05:11No explanation was ever given.
05:14And now we want pizza for supper.
05:18Number 4, Single-Use Plastics.
05:20As long as people can remember, shopping stores have provided plastic bags to
05:24customers to hold their purchased goods.
05:32For items like groceries, having bags to put them in was a necessity to bring them home.
05:37Not so much anymore in Canada.
05:39Single-use plastics are now seeing their end in the Great White North.
05:42So there are now five categories of single-use plastics that can no longer be
05:47manufactured or imported for sale in Canada now.
05:51Many provinces have already instituted bans on plastic bags, utensils, and even straws.
05:57And as of December 20th, 2025, the sale, manufacturing, and importing of such plastics
06:03will be illegal.
06:04The intention is to try to rid Canada of as much disposable plastic as possible,
06:09while consumers are steered towards bringing their own reusable bags.
06:20Number 3, Bugles.
06:22Now, here's a snack that has had several attempts in the Canadian market.
06:27The corn chip favorite had been available for years and then was discontinued in Canada back in 2010 due to a lack of demand.
06:42Canadians made their love of Bugles known to General Mills and they brought them back in 2011.
06:47When he eats the Bugles, he finds a crispy corn crunch and discovers with Bugles, it's the taste that's a blast.
06:54Canucks must have enjoyed them because they stayed around for more than a decade.
06:58But in 2022, the company confirmed via Twitter that they would no longer be available in Canada.
07:04Looks like Canadians need to make their voices heard once again.
07:07Let's make a snack in the shape of a Bugle.
07:11Genius.
07:12Number 2, Delicio Pizza.
07:14Here's another entry from our friends at Nestle.
07:16A popular brand of frozen pizzas known as Delicio was also pulled from Canadian shelves in 2023.
07:22We didn't mean to cause you any inconvenience with new Delicio Ultimate.
07:27Although not cited as the official reason,
07:29it was reported that Nestle had no factory in Canada for any of its frozen foods.
07:34With no local source to produce these goods,
07:36it's reasonable to assume they were importing them into the country.
07:39This breaks all kinds of rules.
07:41With supply chain issues having become worse due to COVID-19,
07:45this may have contributed to the loss of this and other brands of theirs.
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08:07Number 1, Kleenex.
08:09Does anyone ever call them facial tissues?
08:12They've always been known as a Kleenex.
08:15People wouldn't say, years ago, give me a tissue.
08:19They would say, you know, pass me a Kleenex.
08:22And that is big.
08:24You know a brand has power when the brand name
08:27literally becomes the name we use to call a product.
08:30Yet even with that recognition,
08:32Kimberly Clark decided that 2023 would be the last year
08:36their Kleenex tissues would be sold in Canadian stores.
08:39It's most likely a profitability play.
08:41This analyst says the tissue market is highly competitive,
08:44but not always cost-effective.
08:46The biggest problem was that despite the name recognition,
08:49there's nothing to distinguish their brand
08:51from any of the other major ones already in the Canadian market.
08:54Both Kruger products and Irving have a good portion of the country's market on tissues,
08:59making it that much harder for Kleenex to compete.
09:01We're ready to take on more volume and to take the place that is opening up.
09:10Which one of these do you think deserves a second chance in Canada?
09:14Let us know in the comments.
09:15It's one of those new paninis from Lean Cuisine.
09:18I'm gonna go eat my keyboard.
09:20Introducing Lean Cuisine paninis.
09:21Do something good for yourself.
09:22Did you enjoy this video?
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