How the Hot Dog Found Its Bun (24 page)

Read How the Hot Dog Found Its Bun Online

Authors: Josh Chetwynd

Tags: #food fiction, #Foodies, #trivia buffs, #food facts, #History

BOOK: How the Hot Dog Found Its Bun
3.33Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Tempura

“I had long . . . Japanese cuisine.” Takashi Morieda, “The Japanese Table,” Kikkoman website, www.kikkoman.com/foodforum/thejapanesetablebackissues/06.shtml.

TV Dinners

“It was very . . . for turkeys.” and “a metaphor . . . annual problem,” Roy Rivenburg, “A landmark idea, yes, but whose? Tracing the invention of the TV dinner opens a can, er, tray of worms,”
Los Angeles Times
, November 23, 2003, E1.
“I figured . . . some attention,” Associated Press, “Think of Gerry Thomas when you eat your next TV dinner,”
Gazette
(Cedar Rapids, Iowa), November 17, 1999, 8A.

 

 

Desserts

Chocolate Chip Cookies

“try a lot . . . husband’s favorites.” and “your goal . . . and hostess.” Ruth Graves Wakefield,
Toll House Tried and True Recipes
(New York: Dover Publications, Inc., 1977), 59.

no substitutes
. . . cream.” and “Certainty in . . . eliminates failures.” Ruth Graves Wakefield,
Ruth Wakefield’s Toll House Tried and True Recipes
(New York: M. Barrows & Company, Inc., 1940), 3, 9.

Chocolate Molten Cake (Chocolate Lava Cake)

“as gracefully as . . . even riveting—meals.” Frank Bruni, “Two Trailblazers, Well Down the Trail,”
New York Times
, August 16, 2006, F8.
“legend . . . clean and simple.” Alexandra Gill, “Where’s the wow?”
Globe and Mail
(Toronto), March 25, 2009, www.theglobeandmail.com/life/article977186.ece.
“Baking one . . . miscalculated the timing.” and “screaming wanting the recipe.” Virginia Gerst, “This is a flop? Kitchen mistakes—like this molten chocolate cake—can live on and turn into classics with time.”
Chicago Tribune
, April 26, 2006, 1 (Good Eating section).
“He was the . . . in France already.” Arthur Schwartz, “Jacques Torres and Molten Chocolate Cake,” April 9, 2001, www.thefoodmaven.com/diary/00000167.html.

Cookies ’N Cream Ice Cream

“Swirl, smack . . . you’re looking for.” Liz Van Hooser, “Meet an official taster for Edy’s ice cream,”
Florida Times-Union
(Jacksonville), April 2, 2009, http: //jacksonville.com/lifestyles/food/2009-04-02/story/tough_on_ice_cream.
“I was in . . . invented by accident.” Tracy Rasmussen, “Way cookie crumbled gave birth to hit flavor,”
Reading Eagle
(Pennsylvania), April 30, 2001, A4.

Crêpes Suzette

“I was only 16 . . . that day crêpes Suzette.” and “unglamorous as . . . stand.” James Bacon (Associated Press), “Accidental Flame Won World Fame,”
Robesonian
(Lumberton, N.C.), April 19, 1961, 2.
“a jeweled . . . a cane,” Henri Charpentier, Boyden Sparks, and Alice Waters,
Life a la Henri: Being the Memories of Henri Charpentier
(New York: Modern Library, 2001), 57.
“I only make . . . and happy diners.” James Bacon (Associated Press), “Legendary Crepes Suzette Creator Dies at Age 81,”
Modesto Bee
(California), December 25, 1961, A2.

Granny Smith Apples

“is nearly . . . in shipping.” Roger Yepsen,
Apples
(New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 1994), 120.
Candies and Snacks

Cheese Puffs

“[w]hen streamlets . . . human consumption.” US Patent #2,295,868, Patented September 15, 1942, entitled “Process for Preparing Food Products.”

Chewing Gum

“It was an accident . . . something with bubbles.” Abby Goodnough, “W. E. Diemer, Bubble Gum Inventor, Dies at 93,”
New York Times
, January 12, 1998, www.nytimes.com/1998/01/12/us/we-diemer-bubble-gum-inventor-dies-at-93.html.

Doughnuts

“greasy sinkers”; “the first . . . mortal eyes”; and “Of course . . . we used to eat.” Sally Levitt Steinberg,
The Donut Book: The Whole Story in Words, Pictures & Outrageous Tales
(North Adams, Mass.: Storey Publishing, 2004), 69.

Graham Crackers

“high-seasoned food . . . the genital passions.” Ronald Bailey, “The new age of reason: is the Fourth Great Awakening finally coming to a close?”
Reason
, April 1, 2008, 32.
“enthusiastically embraced.” Barbara Brown Zikmund, “The legacy of this place: Oberlin, Ohio,”
Journal of Ecumenical Studies
, September 22, 2007, 499.
“Grahamites” and “poet of bran,” Charles Panati,
Panati’s Extraordinary Origins of Everyday Things
(New York: Perennial Library, 1987), 414.

Jelly Tots

“I didn’t even . . . attention to it.” and “They either hug . . . ruining their teeth.” Grant Woodward, “Brian Boffey: Horsforth’s own Jelly Tots inventor,”
Yorkshire Post
(UK), March 9, 2009.

PEZ

“a luxury confection for wealthy people.” “Austrian Cult Candy: PEZ Celebrates its 80th Anniversary With a Unique Charity Campaign!”
Medianet Press Release Wire
, October 10, 2007.
“smoking prohibited, PEZing allowed.”
Food Trade Review
, March 1, 2007.
“pocket article dispensing container.” US Patent #2,620,061, Patented December 2, 1952, entitled “Pocket Article Dispensing Container.”

Pop Rocks

“Throughout the industry . . . one else considered”; “Carbonated candy . . . better to do?”; and “we checked . . . alive and well.” Marv Rudolph,
Pop Rocks: The Inside Story of America’s Revolutionary Candy
(Sharon, Mass.: Specialty Publishers LLC, 2006), 1, 21, 87.

Popsicles

“a handled frozen confection.” and “I was flat . . . same since.” Associated Press, “Frank Epperson, 89, Inventor of Popsicle, Dies in California,”
New York Times
, October 27, 1983, www.nytimes.com/1983/10/27/obituaries/frank-epperson-89-inventor-of-popsicle-dies-in-california.html.
“It has given . . . part of it all.” United Press International, “Popsicle inventor notes anniversary,”
Daily Facts
(Redlands, Calif.), March 16, 1973, 2.

Potato Chips

“fit for a king . . . could contrive”; “most credible”; and “Aunt Katie . . . plenty of these.” Dirk Burhans,
Crunch! A History of the Great American Potato Chip
(Madison, Wis.: Terrace Books, 2008), 16, 20–21.

Twinkies

“I shortened . . . the kids.” and “Some people say . . . never hurt them.” Edward Baumann, “James A. Dewar, 88; Created Twinkies Cakes,”
Chicago Tribune
, July 2, 1985, C6.
“WASP Soul Food.” Jerry Belcher, “Man who concocted the Twinkie dies; James A. Dewar’s Treat is part of America’s diet and folklore,”
Los Angeles Times
, July 3, 1985, 2 (Metro section).

 

 

Additives and Extras

Ice-Cream Cone

“He actually . . . tea cups.” Jim Salter (Associated Press), “Ice cream cone’s birth topic of heated debate,”
Grand Rapids Press
(Michigan), October 5, 2003, A5.
“Many of the . . . 100 years ago.” “Centennial ode to the cone,”
Chicago Tribune
, July 9, 2004, 22 (Editorial section).

Maple Syrup

“the chase”; “she might . . . the snow”; “strict compliance”; and “pleasant drink,” Rowland E. Robinson, “Old-Time Sugar-Making,”
Atlantic Monthly
, vol. 77 (1896), 467–68.
“picture pioneer . . . by none.” Vermont Department of Agriculture, “Sugar Making by the Indians,”
Bulletin
, 1914, 17.

Marmalade

“Janet Keiller . . . own marmalade.” C. Anne Wilson,
The Book of Marmalade
(Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1999), 64.

Mayonnaise

“[E]vidently, he . . . Port Mahon.” and “[T]he Richelieu . . . makes sense.” Debbie Elliot, National Public Radio
(Weekend All Things Considered),
August 13, 2006.

Nutella

“Every chocolatier . . . make chocolate.” Clara Ferreira-Marques (Reuters), “Turin hosts month-long feast dipped in layers of chocolate,”
Star-Ledger
(Newark, N.J.), May 12, 2004, 40 (Savor section).
“famous.” Alan Davidson, Tom Jaine (ed.),
The Oxford Companion to Food
(New York: Oxford University Press, 2006), 375.
“the Piedmontese . . . sweet taste.” Elena Kostioukovitch,
Why Italians Love to Talk About Food
(New York: Macmillan, 2009), 96.

Whipped Cream

“Yes, the chemists . . . the housewives’ cares.” Kenneth T. Downs, “You Mean You Never Have Any Luck At Whipping Cream?”
Indiana Evening Gazette
, April 26, 1935, 3.

Worcestershire Sauce

“as far as . . . in India.” and “We have . . . own truth.” R. W. Apple Jr. (
New York Times
), “Don’t ask what makes Lea & Perrins Worcestershire so special—they won’t tell,”
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
, August 30, 2000.

 

 

Drinks

Champagne

“The orgies . . . champagne brings.” and “These phenomena . . . from happening.” Don and Petie Kladstrup,
Champagne: How the World’s Most Glamorous Wine Triumphed Over War and Hard Times
(New York: HarperCollins e-books, 2005), Kindle locations 589, 628.

Coca-Cola

“Someone in need . . . Pemberton’s products.” and “The medical properties . . . mental depression, etc.” Constance L. Hays,
The Real Thing: Truth and Power at the Coca-Cola Company
(New York: Random House, 2004), 96, 100–101.

Gibson Martini

“found himself . . . cocktail parties.” Irma von Starkloff Rombauer, Marion Rombauer Becker,
Joy of Cooking
(New York: Simon and Schuster, 1975), 50.

Other books

My Darling Melissa by Linda Lael Miller
Up in Smoke by T. K. Chapin
Siren's Storm by Lisa Papademetriou
Traps and Specters by Bryan Chick
Reluctant Guardian by Melissa Cunningham
Touch Me by Chris Scully
Genetics of Original Sin by Christian De Duve