Las Vegas Review-Journal

Leftover turkey created an American classic

- By J. Mark Powell J. Mark Powell is a novelist, former TV journalist and diehard history buff. Have a historical mystery that needs solving? A forgotten moment worth rememberin­g? Please send it to Holycow@ insidesour­ces.com.

Insidesour­ces.com

Acommon question is repeated these days from Alaska to Maine: What will we do with the leftover turkey? It’s as much a part of the holiday tradition as the dressing and pumpkin pie.

There are the usual options. Turkey casserole, turkey hash, turkey noodle soup, turkey tetrazzini and, of course, the cold turkey sandwich.

A company had the same problem on its hands in 1953, only on a scale infinitely larger than your refrigerat­or. And what it did with all that leftover bird created an American classic. But let’s start a little beyond that.

The frozen food business was on a roll throughout the middle of the 20th century. Clarence Birdseye discovered how to flash-freeze fish in 1929, creating a new industry. By 1945, Maxson Food Systems sold complete frozen meals to the military and commercial airlines. In 1949, the first frozen dinners appeared in the Pittsburgh area, packaged in paperboard containers. They expanded to much of the East Coast three years later.

In 1950, Nebraska-based C.A. Swanson began selling oven-ready pot pies and turkeys. Business was brisk. Then, in 1953, someone in the company goofed. Badly. The supply of frozen turkeys it had produced far exceeded the demand. Swanson was stuck with 260 tons of it in 10 refrigerat­ed railroad cars.

Necessity, they say, is the mother of invention. The answer came from a company salesman.

Gerry Thomas had tried frozen dinners on airline flights the year before and was impressed by them. He immediatel­y rolled into action, ordering aluminum trays similar to those used on airplanes (and based on trays the military had used in World War II). He filled them with sliced frozen turkey, cornbread dressing with gravy and peas.

The concept was astonishin­gly simple. Housewives popped them into the oven, waited 25 minutes, and then — presto! — dinner was served. All for 98 cents each. (Though that wasn’t the bargain it sounds like today. It was pricey in 1953. That 98 cents is about $11.40 today.)

We don’t know who came up with “TV dinners.” There’s a widely believed misconcept­ion that the new product was intended to be eaten while watching television. Not true. The new medium was all the rage in 1953, so Swanson piggybacke­d it by slapping “TV” on the box.

Swanson rolled out 5,000 of its new frozen meals. The TV dinner was an instant hit. The first 5,000 meals sold out almost immediatel­y. It turned out that busy moms were willing to pay for the convenienc­e of quickly and easily feeding their hungry young Baby Boomer kids.

Another round of TV dinners was immediatel­y ordered. It, too, sold exceptiona­lly well. By 1954, 10 million units had been bought. Business was so good Swanson gave up its profitable butter and margarine line to focus on the new product. The company expanded to 20 plants with a combined workforce of 4,000 to keep pace with the demand.

The original TV dinners are still around, though microwave food has greatly diminished its market share. It’s estimated that 127.9 million of them were consumed in 2020; it’s projected to jump to 130.5 million next year.

Not bad for a product that all started with 260 tons of leftover turkey. It makes that half a bird still lingering in your fridge look puny in comparison, doesn’t it?

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