Daily Press

It’s not easy being green cereal

- By Juwon Park and Jaimie Ding Associated Press

SKorea finally gets the scallion-flavored Chex it voted for 16 years ago

SEOUL, South Korea — South Koreans have waited 16 long years for a savory, crispy bite that would satisfy their taste buds and right an infamous wrong.

Now they can finally fill a bowl with the cereal they wanted all along: green onion-flavored Chex.

Kellogg’s limited-edition flavor was released last week, complete with a catchy ad and an apology for the wait. It’s also taken on surprising cultural significan­ce for an odd culinary experiment.

In 2004, the company advertised a public vote for a new product: chocolatef­lavored Cheki or green onion-flavored Chaka.

Chaka led by an overwhelmi­ng margin, but duplicates were said to mar the online vote and Cheki was declared the winner.

Many South Koreans saw the outcome as more than a marketing mishap.

“It’s kind of representa­tive of bigger issues in South Korean society,” said Raphael Rashid, a Seoul-based freelance journalist who writes about South Korean politics and culture. “South Koreans are used to or have experience­d, you know, like years, if not decades, of dictatorsh­ip.”

The chocolate victory was “kind of reminiscen­t” of that, he said.

It brought to the surface long-buried memories for Yoon Gunhee, who voted in the infamous election.

She said she was around 13 or 14 when she discovered an advertisem­ent for the flavor election on the back of a cereal box.

“At the time, I was young so I voted for chocolate,” said Yoon, a freelance game graphic designer. “Green onion really didn’t sound appetizing.”

She remembered people around her voted for the green onion flavor because they found it funny.

Yoon said she was amused recently by the lightheart­ed commercial for green onion Chex — featuring a popular South Korean singer declaring, “I’m sorry, I’m sorry that the green onion flavor arrived so late” and “the promise must be kept,” with scientists in white gowns in a laboratory laboring to develop the perfect flavor. The video has over 900,000 views on YouTube.

Yoon said she would like to buy it “at least once.”

“The rigged voting at the time was such an unpleasant experience,” she recalled. While the memory was a small one, she was reminded of it whenever she saw a box of Chex.

South Korean Twitter has been rejoicing by uploading photos of their Chex. Some, feeling adventurou­s, sprinkled green onion cereal pieces as garnish on South Korean signature dishes including kimchi and spicy ramen noodles.

Like Americans, South Koreans typically eat their cereal with milk, but some say green onion Chex tastes better alone or with a drink like beer or soju.

Rashid positioned himself to be among the first to try it and acquired a box online. On Thursday, his face turned sour when he got his first taste.

It has an “artificial onion background taste,” he said, reminiscen­t of onion ring snacks that are popular in Korea.

“It doesn’t taste great,” Rashid said, rinsing his mouth between bites. “And I think Kellogg knows that it probably doesn’t taste great either.”

 ?? JUWON PARK/AP ?? Journalist Raphael Rashid with a box of green onion-flavored Chex cereal alongside its chocolate counterpar­t in Seoul, South Korea.
JUWON PARK/AP Journalist Raphael Rashid with a box of green onion-flavored Chex cereal alongside its chocolate counterpar­t in Seoul, South Korea.

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