he's favortie color jelly bean was orange and redand others i think maybe Melissa would know if you were to text her !!!!!!
he's favortie color jelly bean was orange and redand others i think maybe Melissa would know if you were to text her !!!!!!
He was known for his love of jelly beans.
Jelly beans
President Reagan's favorite Jelly Belly flavor was licorice.
Ronald Reagan, the 40th US president, served from 1981 to 1989 and had a fondness for jelly beans.
Reaan was noted as liking "Jelly Belly" jelly beans. The company sent him several boxes.
Reagan started eating jelly beans when he gave up smoking in the early 1960's.It may not have been his favorite food but he was certainly well known for them. It was mac and cheese
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Ronald Reagan always had a jar of jelly beans on his desk in the Oval Office.
Licorice was reported to be Reagan's favorite flavor.
your favorite flavour at color
Was it pectin cause I know he started eating them when he stopped smoking. In 1976 jelly bellies came on the market so he started eating them right away.AnswerThe answer is Blueberry, this flavor was specifically created for Ronald Reagan's inauguration. He also loved black licorice jelly beans and was his favorite.
Ronald Reagan started eating jelly beans when he gave up smoking in the early 1960's. On his first day as governor of California, candymaker Henry Rowland gave Reagan a big jar of jelly beans, which Reagan put on the Cabinet Room table. That was the beginning of a long tradition of passing out jelly beans during Cabinet meetings. "We can hardly start a meeting or make a decision without passing around the jar of jelly beans," he told Rowland. Reagan also once said that, "You can tell a lot about a fella's character by whether he picks out all of one color or just grabs a handful." Sometime later he remarked, "Some political figures have endured in history as lions or conquerors or something equally impressive. It's a little frightening to think California history might record us as jelly beans." When Reagan was elected President in 1980, Henry Rowland told reporters, "There will be jelly beans in the White House, that's all I can say." True to form, Reagan kept a crystal jar full of his favorite jelly beans (Jelly Belly's) for Cabinet meetings and encouraged his department chiefs to eat them when they needed energy. Guests at Reagans 1980 inaugural parties consumed 40 million jelly beans --- almost equalling the number of votes he received in the election. Here is an interesting link that discusses Reagan's interest in Jelly beans: associatedcontent.com/article/194607/jelly_beans_a_colorful_history_and.html?cat=74