Showing posts with label history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label history. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Monday, October 13, 2008

Candy Corn Unwrapped Video from FoodTV

Too bad I can't embed the video, but here's a 3 minute video from the Food Network's show Unwrapped all about Candy Corn.

UPDATE: I found the video on YouTube

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

NPR's Ode to Candy Corn

On October 28, 2007, Bonny Wolf of NPR did a 3-minute segment on candy corn.

Have a listen: NPR's Ode to Candy Corn

Monday, October 6, 2008

Who Invented Candy Corn?

Candy corn was invented and produced in the 1880's (perhaps 1884?) by the Wunderlee Candy Company in Philadelphia, PA. For some perspective, this was about 3 decades after Stephen Whitman first sold boxed chocolates and about 2 decades after Richard Cadbury boxed chocolates. Within a decade of Wunderlee's candy corn, Wrigley's Juciy Fruit, Wrigley's Spearmint Gum, Cracker Jacks, and the Tootsie Roll would be created and sold. It wouldn't be until 1900 that Hershey would begin selling his milk chocolate bar!

It's generally reported (including the National Confectioners Association) that it was Wunderlee employee George Renninger who invented candy corn. However, I've read other entries that cite others or that it is unknown. Even if we don't know exactly who the first person was, we certainly know it came from Philadelphia's Wunderlee Candy Company.

Wunderlee was a small company and there isn't much about what happened to them, but we do know that it wasn't Wunderlee who took candy corn to the mass markets. It took a German immigrant, Gustav Goelitz of Cincinnati, Ohio in 1898 to start the Goelitz Candy Company and mass produce candy corn.

It's my belief that there were three major factors why candy corn took off in popularity:
  1. Candy corn was sweet
  2. Candy corn was scarce - mass-produced candy was in short supply at the time and was only produced 8 months in a year
  3. Candy corn looked appealing - farmers liked that the candy looked like a kernel of corn (the yellow end is the 'top') and the general public considered it revolutionary because of it's tri-colored design
The Goelitz Candy Company had a big success on their hands with candy corn but came into major success when they introduced the Jelly Belly jelly bean in 1976. Soon they became the Jelly Belly Candy Company.

Although there are several brands that make today's candy corn, the leader is Brach's.

In 1904, German immigrant Emil J. Brach opened Brach's Palace of Sweets in Chicago. In 1948 Brach's decided to begin selling candy corn during Halloween. Soon Brach's became the top candy seller in America. Since then the company has been bought and sold several times including being acquired by Farley's & Sathers Candy Company in 2007.

Today it is estimated that more than 35 million pounds of candy corn is produced annually (that's about 9 billion pieces of candy corn!)

Of the 9 billion pieces, I do my fair share annually to be sure!