Friday, April 9, 2010

FUN FACT FRIDAY: The Twinkie turns 80!!!!



This does not mean you can go out and celebrate by eating a bunch of Twinkies! Thought it would be fun to pass along this little tidbit of how an unhealthy, empty calorie, no nutrition treat can become an American icon.... Perhaps this was the start of the junk food road????

Do you really believe that they have a shelf life? Or is this Hostess' way of trying to convince us that it isn't really all that bad for us?



Happy 80th birthday to the Twinkie

Published: Thursday, April 8, 2010 12:21 p.m. MDT

Twinkies do, in fact, have a shelf life — 25 days, to be precise, according to Hostess Foods. It only seems like the yellow sponge cake injected with vanilla cream filling lasts forever. Maybe because it's been around as long as anyone can remember.

The snack was invented on April 6, 1930, by a bakery manager named James Dewar in Schiller Park, Ill., just outside Chicago. His employer, the Continental Baking Co., was looking for a cheap snack to serve to Depression-hit consumers, and Dewar noticed that stacks of shortcake pans never got used outside the six-week summer strawberry season. So he experimented, and came up with a uniquely American creation. They were sold two for a nickel.

About 500 million Twinkies are now sold each year, and they're as beloved by children and snackaholics as they are loathed by nutritionists. A package of them was placed in the Millennium Time Capsule by President Clinton in 1999 (well, of course he would), and they've been (erroneously) blamed for causing murderous tendencies, thanks to the "Twinkie" criminal defense.

Are they good for you? Well, they're not terrible: One single cake has about 150 calories, 4.5 grams of fat and 19 grams of sugar. You could do worse.

But Hostess lays on the "it's not that bad for you" frosting a little thick. The company quotes "Mr. Twinkie" himself, Dewar, who purportedly ate three Twinkies a day for 50 years until his death in 1985 at age 88. "I fed them to my four kids and they feed them to my four grandchildren. Twinkies never hurt them."

Must have been fun growing up Dewar. "Apple? Whatya want one of those for? Twinkies built this house, and by God you're eating them."

Here are a few more tidbits about Twinkies:

— Dewar named the snack after a billboard he saw advertising Twinkle Toe Shoes, but never got paid royalties for his creation.

— The Twinkie originally had banana filling, but bananas were rationed during WWII, so vanilla was substituted. Customers liked it so much it stayed in there.

— The deep-fried Twinkie was invented at the Texas State Fair. Here's a recipe.

— In a nod to the supposed indestructibility of the snacks, the T.W.I.N.K.I.E. Project lists several silly experiments that can be performed on them, such as the "gravitational response test" (i.e. dropping one from a 6th-floor window).

More about the "Twinkie defense." It was coined by a journalist during the trial of Dan White, who shot and killed San Francisco Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk in 1978. A psychiatrist for the defense testified that White's sudden all-junk-food diet was symptomatic of the depression that led him to snap and kill the men, not a cause of it. The word "Twinkie" was never actually used in court.

In other words, eating a Twinkie alone won't make you want to kill. So it's safe to have one, now and then.

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