Things you didn't know about Hershey's
chocolate By Dan Myers Published June 24, 2015.
There aren't many food products that
just about every person in America has eaten, but Hershey's makes plenty of
them. Hershey's Kisses, Reese's Peanut Butter Cups, Twizzlers, Almond Joy...
the list goes on and on. But behind the chocolate bar is a huge company and a
man named Hershey, and we bet there are some things you didn't know about them.
Before it was the largest chocolate manufacturer in America, the Hershey
Chocolate Company was the brainchild of Milton Hershey, a Pennsylvania Dutch
Mennonite who after two failed attempts at launching his own candy company
decided to focus on an increasingly popular confection: chocolate. He bought a
milk processing plant in order to perfect his milk chocolate (which was then a
luxury product), and once he did, he built a plant on farmland in his
Pennsylvania hometown, which was renamed Hershey in 1905. All of his employees
lived in the factory town, and were well provided for. The company grew rapidly
over the ensuing years as Hershey's cocoa and chocolate bars proved to be huge
successes. In 1907, Kisses were introduced, peanut-filled Mr. Goodbar was
rolled out in 1925, Hershey's Syrup the following year, semi-sweet dark
chocolate chips in 1928, and the crisped-rice filled Krackel bar in 1938. The
company has been nothing short of a juggernaut for well over 100 years, and
shows no sign of slowing down. Hershey, Pennsylvania, is today still home to
one of the company's many plants, as well as a boarding school founded by
Hershey, a stadium, a 10,500-seat arena, the Hershey Hotel, the Hershey Museum,
a hospital, and the legendary Hersheypark, which was founded all the way back
in 1906 as a leisure park for the company's employees. The Hershey company
employs 13,000 employees and its products are sold in more than 60 countries
worldwide, and although Hershey passed away in 1945, he would certainly be
proud if he could see the legacy of his ideas. 1. Milton Hershey Got His
Start Making Caramels, Not Chocolate After launching two unsuccessful
confectionary businesses in Philadelphia and New York, which lasted six years
and three years, respectively, Hershey returned to Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and
launched the Lancaster Caramel Company in 1886 using a recipe he acquired on
his travels. The company was a massive success. He sold it for $1 million in
1900 (the equivalent of more than $28 million today) and focused his attentions
on chocolate, stating that "caramels are just a fad, but chocolate is a
permanent thing. 2. The 'Hershey Process' Is Still a Trade Secret iStock
Milk chocolate was originally a luxury item because it was so difficult to keep
the milk from spoiling before it could be incorporated into the chocolate.
Hershey knew that the success of his company was dependent on making milk
chocolate available to the masses, so he spent three years perfecting a process
for production, which came to be known as the Hershey Process. The exact
process is still a tightly guarded secret, but experts agree that the milk goes
through a process called lipolysis, which stabilizes it by creating butyric
acid. 3. Milton Hershey Was Supposed to Be on the Titanic iStock Milton
Hershey and his wife, Kitty, had booked a first-class cabin on the ill-fated
maiden voyage of the RMS Titanic, but they had to cancel their plans at the
last minute due to business matters. 4. One of the 'M's in 'M&Ms'
Stood for the Name of the Son of Hershey's President Hershey had full control
of rationed chocolate during World War II, so when Forrest Mars, the son of
Mars Candy Company founder Frank Mars, set out to create a chocolate pellet
covered in a candy shell, he needed to partner with someone from Hershey. None
other than Bruce Murrie, the son of Hershey's president William Murrie, agreed
to go into business with Mars, providing Hershey's chocolate in return for a 20
percent stake in the company, called M&M Limited (after Mars & Murrie).
Mars bought out Murrie's interest in 1948 and became one of Hershey's main
competitors, but the candy's name stuck. 5. 80 Million Hershey's Kisses
Are Produced Daily Hershey's Kisses and
M&M's have gone back and forth over the years as the top-selling candy in
America, with Reese's Peanut Butter Cups taking the No. 3 spot. 6. The
Company Owns Some Surprising Brands Krave Jerky Brands owned by the company
include Dagoba Organic Chocolate, Breath Savers, Bubble Yum, Good & Plenty,
Ice Breakers, Jolly Rancher, Mauna Loa, Scharffen Berger, Rolo, and Krave
Jerky, their first non-confection product.
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