206
S C A T T E R B R A I N E D
07
Candy Is Dandy
Th
e story of the jelly bean is of one
of the great marriages in
the whole history of candy.
The Jelly Pre-Bean:
Th
e jelly part of jelly beans was fi rst cre-
ated thousands of years ago
in Turkey—when it arrived in
the English-speaking world,
they called it Turkish delight.
Delicious, sure, but Turkish
delight
left a sticky residue on
fi ngers.
The Bean Pre-Jelly:
Jordan
almond candy is a “candy” that
tastes a lot like bitter almonds.
Th
e candies are often served at
weddings to represent the bit-
ter and the sweet, but in our
experience, Jordan almonds
are shorter on sweet than Mike
Tyson’s marriage to
Robin Giv-
ens. However, Jordan almond
candy does have an often pas-
tel, semihard crust.
The Marriage:
Sometime in
the 19th century, the crust of
Jordan almond candies and
Turkish delight were joined to-
gether in blissful matrimony.
Mars
The Good:
In the 1920s,
Frank Mars (1883–1934)
invented a series of candy
bars,
including Snickers,
which he named after a
family horse, and Mars,
which he named after him-
self. Frank wanted to keep
the company small, but his
short-tempered, ambitious
son
Forrest made it a huge
success, branching out into
everything from M&M’s to
high-end pet food.
The Bad:
Forrest was famous
for his M&M-fl inging tem-
per tantrums.
The Exceedingly Weird:
For-
rest also made his employ-
ees taste-test every single
one of their products—in-
cluding the aforementioned
pet food.
207
✖ ✖ ✖
Sylvester Graham (1794–1851)
was a Presbyterian minister
who saw the two greatest evils in life as “venereal excess” and
alcohol consumption. His solution to lust and booze was sim-
ple: a vegetarian diet. To make vegetarianism more palatable,
he invented graham crackers in 1829.
✖ ✖ ✖
Few titans of industry have
been more widely loved than
Milton Snavely Hershey
(1857–1945), whose elemen-
tary school nicknames we
can only imagine. After he
made it big by manufactur-
ing America’s fi rst tasty milk
chocolate, he returned to his
hometown of
Derry Church,
Pa., where he built a giant
factory and a school for or-
phans. In thanks, the people
of Pennsylvania set about
naming every single solitary
item in the state after him.
✖ ✖ ✖
Although today he is remem-
bered primarily for Crunch
bars, Henri Nestlé (1814–
1890) was the fi rst
man to in-
vent a safe baby formula.
Sadly, he was inspired by ex-
perience: Five of his 13 sib-
lings died during childhood.
Life Savers
Before electric refrigeration be-
came widespread and afford-
able (around 1920), summer was
a bad time for chocolate makers.
Looking for nonmelty revenue
streams in 1912, Ohio chocolate
manufacturer Clarence Crane
developed a hard peppermint
candy that could withstand sum-
mer heat. To make his candy
even more summer-friendly (and
to differentiate them from tradi-
tional mints, which were square),
Crane
shaped his invention after
the round life preservers that
were gaining popularity at the
time. Unfortunately, Crane
hocked his idea soon after. Be-
tween 1913 and 1987, 33.4 bil-
lion Life Savers were sold. And
like so many inventors before
him, Crane never saw a penny of
the profi ts. But the sad story of
Clarence Crane doesn’t end
there. He had this son, see. . . .
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