It's that time of year.

CANDY CORN!






http://www.hauntedbay.com/history/candycorn.shtml
For those of us over the age of 25, when you think of Halloween candy you think of candy corn, those sugary little spikes of Halloween cheer. They've been around for as long as I remember and even as long as my grandparents remember but did you know that they were invented in the 1880's? Who the first person to make these tasty treats was is unknown but the Wunderle Candy Company of Philadelphia was the first to go into commercial production. However, the company most closely associated with this wonderful confection is the Goelitz Confectionery Company. Founder Gustav Goelitz, a German immigrant, began commercial production of the treat in 1898 in Cincinnati and is today the oldest manufacturer of the Halloween icon.

Making candy at the turn of the last century wasn't the highly mechanized, year-round activity it is today. Candy was manufactured seasonally from March through November. Large kettles were used to cook the basic ingredients of candy corn, sugar, water, and corn syrup into a slurry. Fondant for smooth texture and marshmallow for a soft bite would be whipped in. When the right consistency was reached the hot candy would be poured into hand-held buckets called runners. Each runner holding 45 pounds of the hot mixture.

Next, men called stringers would walk backward pouring the steaming candy into trays of cornstarch imprinted with kernel-shaped molds. Three passes were made, one for each white, orange, and yellow color. A strenuous job at best before the days of air-conditioning and electric fans.

All this strenuous labor wasn't lost on the tiny candy. It's tricolor design was considered revolutionary for its time and people flocked to buy them. Their shape was also a big selling point for the mostly agrarian population of the early 1900's. So popular was candy corn that companies tried other vegetable shapes including turnips. The Goelitz Candy Company even had to turn orders down for lack of production capacity.

Candy corn was originally sold in bulk containers like most foods products of the time. They were packed in wooden buckets, tubs, and cartons to be delivered by wagon and train over relatively short distances. Perishability prevented widespread distribution.

During WWI, Herman Goelitz, son of Gustav, moved to Fairfield, California to start his own company, the Herman Goelitz Candy Company. Their product? Candy Corn! The fortune of the Halloween treat would rise and fall many times as recession and boom, war and peace, affected the humble confection. Throughout the hard times it was the sale of candy corn that kept the companies afloat. In the sugar crisis of the mid 1970's when the price of raw sugar skyrocketed the company had to borrow heavily to buy sugar to keep production up. After the crisis the market plummeted. Many companies went out of business. It was demand for the candy corn that kept Goelitz from bankruptcy.

Today you won't have to look very hard to find candy corn. Computer and machine aided production have made them a plentiful staple no matter what time of year. So plentiful in fact that according to the National Confectioners Association, in 2001 candy manufacturers sold more than 20 million pounds of candy corn. Roughly 8.3 billion kernels! Very impressive for a product that has remained virtually unchanged for well over 100 years.

Perhaps best of all, everyone can feel comfortable about enjoying tasty kernel or two. According to the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry, candy is no different than a slice of bread, bowl of cereal or a cracker when it comes to causing tooth decay. Any food that contains sugar or starch can cause tooth decay – especially if one doesn’t brush and floss daily. So grab a bag of candy corn and enjoy. Just remember to brush your teeth after.




YUMMY!!!

Verileah 20 years ago
I suppose it surprises no one that I think candy corn is revolting.

The kids in my neighborhood are getting travel sized toothbrushes this year.

Well actually, no, that won't happen because Fozz is a nice guy.
ROzbeans 20 years ago
I was watching a comedy show the other day and this guy's bit was about candy corn. That all the candy corn ever made in the world, was made in 1925. All of it. I buy a fucking GANK load of it every fall. I horded some at my mother's house last september.

It is pure. Yellow and orange. It is sugary gold. /squee
Maeya 20 years ago
I used to love candy corn so much. It was my favorite treat. Now I can't even stand to look at it. =/
ROzbeans 20 years ago
Blasphemy!!!! =D I enjoyed the autumn mix today. Had a very robust flavor. I believed it rained the day it was made in 1925. :teehee
Larry 20 years ago
I'm with ya on the candy corn, Roz! It's my favorite Halloween treat!
Nastirith 20 years ago
I can still handle the candy corn...it's the Peeps that I can't stomach anymore! I used to eat them by the bucket load. ;)
Mai 20 years ago
Peeps O_O that makes me go into sugar shock just thinking of them! :faint
Nastirith 20 years ago
And yet, every year I will buy a pack of them...open them, put the first sugar coated gooeyness in my mouth...and the others will just sit there, hardening, until finally I break something valuable by accidentally dropping them on it. *snickers* You'd think I'd learn...
Maeya 20 years ago
Now, peeps I love <3 I prefer the bunnies to the chicks though.
Rikr 20 years ago
If by autumn mix you mean the candy corn in the shape of pumpkins etc.......those are awsome! I'm a fan of peeps too. My GF gets them for me for Halloween and Easter. :)
Gilae 20 years ago
Peeps are fun to blow up in the microwave.
Also, I hate candy corn.
Rikr 20 years ago
Gilae
Peeps are fun to blow up in the microwave.
Also, I hate candy corn.



I've never nuked a Peep. (You're sick)
Hating candy corn? Blasphemy.
Verileah 20 years ago
About the only thing peeps are good for is Peep jousting, in which you take two peeps, stick one toothpick in each of their heads, put them on a plate, set them in the microwave, and see which one wins.
Mai 20 years ago
O_O Billie scares me now
Gilae 20 years ago
Don't knock nuking a peep until you've tried it. Just make sure you put it on a paper plate...and that you're not the one who has to clean the microwave.
Nards 20 years ago
Roz, you need to get out of the house or something. You just started a thread on candy corn. I am worried about you my love.
Calimaryn 20 years ago
Bleh! Candy corn has never been a huge favorite. Its always seemed very blah and tasteless to me. Of course as a vegan I dont eat em now. So no huge loss there!
Gilae 20 years ago
Why can't vegans eat candy corn?
ROzbeans 20 years ago
Nards
Roz, you need to get out of the house or something. You just started a thread on candy corn. I am worried about you my love.


A topic about candy corn concerns everyone. The sugary gold sweetness that it is must be shared. O_o
Draegloth 20 years ago
lewis black did that comedy routine.