You’ve found Roshen’s Yummi Gummi Twists — fruit-flavoured jelly sticks with a bubblegum filling. Roshen does make explicitly halal-labelled products. This isn’t one of them.
The direct verdict: avoid. Yummi Gummi Twists contain gelatine with no disclosed source and carry no halal or kosher label anywhere.
What’s in the Twists
Sugar, glucose-fructose syrup, wheat flour, sorbitol syrup, non-hydrogenated palm oil, shellac glazing agent, glucose, citric acid, wheat starch, mono- and diglycerides of fatty acids, soy lecithin, gelatin, flavourings, colourants (anthocyanin, paprika extract, curcumin, E133).
Two ingredients matter here. Gelatine is confirmed present — this is a jelly candy, and the gel-set texture comes from it, no ambiguity there. What’s not disclosed is the species: Roshen is a conventional Ukrainian manufacturer with no halal certification on this product line, and Eastern European gummy candy manufacturing defaults to pork gelatine unless a product is specifically formulated and labelled otherwise. E471 (mono- and diglycerides) is the second flag — plant or animal source, undisclosed either way.
The glaze itself — shellac (a resin secreted by the lac insect) — is a separate minor point some scholars flag, though it’s a coating, not a bulk ingredient, and considered a lesser concern than the gelatine question.
This Matches Roshen’s Own Pattern
Roshen isn’t a brand you can judge in one sweep — the brand overview covers this in detail. The short version: Roshen explicitly labels its Dark Chocolate 80% and Crabs Caramel “Halal & Kosher” for the US export market, because those products have simple, naturally clean ingredient lists (cocoa, sugar, condensed milk — no gelatine involved). Everything else in the Roshen catalogue, including jellied and gummy sweets, carries no such label.
Yummi Gummi Twists fall squarely into the “no label, gelatine-based, avoid” category the brand page already establishes. This isn’t a new or surprising finding — it’s the expected outcome once you check a specific unlabelled Roshen product against the rule.
Halal Alternatives
- Roshen’s own labelled range — Dark Chocolate 80% Cocoa and Crabs Caramel Candy, both explicitly Halal & Kosher labelled
- Pectin- or agar-based gummy candy — gelatine-free by formulation, sidesteps the sourcing question
- Halal-certified gummy sweets — look for an HMC, HFA, or equivalent logo directly on pack
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Summary
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Is Yummi Gummi Twists halal? | No — avoid |
| Does it contain gelatine? | Yes, confirmed, source undisclosed |
| Does Roshen make halal products? | Yes — Dark Chocolate 80% and Crabs Caramel are labelled Halal & Kosher |
| Is Yummi Gummi Twists one of them? | No |
| Best halal alternative | Roshen’s labelled range, or pectin-based gummy sweets |
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How we reached this verdict
We checked the following Tier-1 sources before publishing this verdict:
- Halal certification bodies: No SANHA, HMC, HFA, JAKIM, or MUI listing exists for Yummi Gummi Twists. A third-party halal-product-safety database (Mustakshif) independently flags a related Roshen “Jelly Yummi Gummi” product as not halal, consistent with this finding.
- Manufacturer statements: Roshen’s own product page and multiple independent retailer ingredient listings confirm gelatine’s presence; none disclose its species.
- Sunni fatwa scholarship across the four madhabs:
- Hanafi-leaning bodies: IslamQA Hanafi, Darul Iftaa Birmingham, AskImam.org, Daruliftaa.com (Mufti Taqi Usmani), Wifaqul Ulama, Darul Iftaa New York.
- Shafi’i / Maliki-leaning bodies: NU (Nahdlatul Ulama, Indonesia), Dar al-Ifta al-Misriyyah (Egypt), e-fatwa.com (UAE), al-Azhar.
- Hanbali / Saudi-Salafi-leaning bodies: Saudi Permanent Committee for Scholarly Research, IslamQA Saudi.
Madhab note
The four Sunni madhabs broadly converge on the rules applied in this guide:
- Unlabelled or unspecified gelatine source — treated as a red flag requiring verification across all four madhabs; the cautious default in the absence of certification is to assume porcine origin, especially from a manufacturer with no halal program covering the product in question.
- Pork-derived gelatine — Haram across all four madhabs, with no exception for processing or dilution.
- Insect-derived glazing agents (shellac, E904) — Hanafi, Shafi’i, and Hanbali scholars generally treat insect derivatives as a lesser concern than mammalian haram sources when used as a thin surface coating rather than a bulk ingredient; some Maliki scholars are more permissive of insect-derived substances generally.
If your madhab differs on a specific ruling, the relevant section above flags the school-specific position. For binding rulings on borderline products, consult a competent scholar in your tradition.
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