Vancouver Sun

A brief history of the Twinkie

- Bill Trott

WASHINGTON — The quintessen­tial junk food treat — a cream- filled, 150- calorie sponge cake — has been called the “cream puff of the proletaria­t” and the “snack with a snack in the middle.” Here are some facts about Twinkies:

• James A. Dewar, a manager for the Continenta­l Baking Co., came up with the idea in 1930 after seeing the machines that made shortcakes with strawberry filling sit idle at the bakery when strawberri­es were out of season. He injected the elongated sponge cake with banana filling — vanilla would be used later — and called it a Twinkie after seeing a billboard for the Twinkle Toe Shoe Company. Dewar, who died in 1985 at age 88, said he ate at least two packets of Twinkies a week.

• Twinkies were scorned by nutritioni­sts as the archetypal unhealthy snack and became a comic’s punch line, but somebody is eating them. Hostess was able to manufactur­e 1,000 a minute at its bakeries and in 2005 the Washington Post said Americans had bought $ 47 million worth of Twinkies in the previous year.

• Many jokes about Twinkies play off their longevity thanks to their ample chemical preservati­ves. There has been much speculatio­n about how many decades a Twinkie can sit on a shelf before being eaten. For the sake of freshness, Theresa Cogswell of the Twinkies’ parent company Hostess, has said that no more than 25 days was ideal, but a Maine college professor gained notoriety by keeping one atop his blackboard for 30 years. He said it still looked good.

• In 2000, then- U. S. president Bill Clinton’s White House Millennium Council put together a time capsule in order to give people in 2100 an idea of how we lived. Its contents included historic items such as a piece of the Berlin Wall, film of Neil Armstrong walking on the moon, a U. S. Second World War soldier’s helmet, a photo of civil rights pioneer Rosa Parks and a Twinkie.

• The trial of San Francisco city supervisor Dan White, who fatally shot the mayor and another supervisor in 1978, gave rise to what came to be known as the “Twinkie defence.” The legal defence said White was suffering mental problems, as evidenced by the way he had given up his healthy lifestyle and started eating junk food. The defence argued that this behaviour was an indication of his instabilit­y. White ended up serving five years in prison for voluntary manslaught­er.

• Twinkies’ surge in popularity in the 1950s was partly attributed to its ads on The Howdy Doody Show directed at kids, who demanded the desserts in their lunch boxes.

• The Twinkie has a long list of television and movie credits. Archie Bunker always had one in his lunch on the sitcom All in the Family and they have been featured in the animated series Family Guy and The Simpsons. A character in The Deer Hunter eats Twinkies dipped in mustard. In the comedy Ghostbuste­rs, a scientist tracking demons calculates that the level of “psychokine­tic energy” in New York City could normally be as big as a Twinkie but things had become so bad that that Twinkie would now be 35 feet long and weigh 600 pounds.

• Twinkies are just part of the Hostess snack food family. Other well- known treats from the company include Ding Dongs, Ho Hos, Suzy Q’s, Sno Balls, Zingers and Drake’s cakes.

• Twitter and other social media were filled with laments about a Twinkie- less world on Friday. Entreprene­urs and speculator­s turned to eBay. A box of 10 Twinkies was being offered on the online auction site for a starting bid of $ 500. “What better way to say, ‘ I love you’ than with the gift of an American icon that will be gone soon,” the seller said.

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