Take a look through our picture gallery to see 11 sweets you might remember if you grew up in Scotland's capital in the 80s, 90s and 2000s.
And let us know which sweeties were you favourite growing up in the comments section.

. Sweet Dreams
Take a look through our picture gallery to see some of the sweets you might remember if you grew up in Edinburgh in the 80s, 90s and 2000s. Photo: Third Party

. Edinburgh Rock
Edinburgh Rock – that mysterious substance somewhere between candy and chalk, looming large in the memories of every Scottish child who ever made a dash for the gift shop on a school trip and named as a play on Castle Rock, which Edinburgh's most visible monument sits atop – is a stalwart of the Scottish experience for tourists and locals alike. The pastel-hued sweet, with its distinctive crumbly texture differentiating it from lettered Blackpool Rock, was first concocted in the 19th century by Alexander Ferguson – also known as “Sweetie Sandy” – who taught himself to make confectionery in his parents' Doune outhouse. Photo: Third Party

. Creamola Foam
Creamola Foam was a soft drink - produced by dissolving raspberry, orange, lemon or cola granules in water to create a foaming, fizzy, luminous beverage. Production of the drink began in Glasgow during the 1950s - and Creamola immediately become one of Scotland’s most iconic exports alongside Tunnock’s Teacakes and Irn-Bru. The brightly packaged drink is a staple of many Scots’ fond memories of childhood - and when production halted in 1997 many were heartbroken. Photo: Third Party

. Kola Cubes / Cola Cubes
Kola Cubes, or Cola Cubes, were like little pieces of geometric joy. Photo: Third Party

5. Creamola Foam
Creamola Foam was a soft drink - produced by dissolving raspberry, orange, lemon or cola granules in water to create a foaming, fizzy, luminous beverage. Production of the drink began in Glasgow during the 1950s - and Creamola immediately become one of Scotland’s most iconic exports alongside Tunnock’s Teacakes and Irn-Bru. The brightly packaged drink is a staple of many Scots’ fond memories of childhood - and when production halted in 1997 many were heartbroken. Photo: Third Party

6. Kola Cubes / Cola Cubes
Kola Cubes, or Cola Cubes, were like little pieces of geometric joy. Photo: Third Party

7. Wham bar
A stone-cold-classic amongst 80s kids. Garish pop art packaging, massive tongue tingling flavour - the Wham bar was as iconic a sweet as you could buy. Photo: Third Party

8. Irn Bru bar
Combining two of Scotland's favourite things - sweets and Irn Bru - this long and sticky chew was every child's dream (and every dentist's nightmare). Photo: Third Party