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September 11, 2008

Foods Invented by Accident

Filed under: MaoBah Topics, Foods

CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES
When the Toll House Inn’s Ruth Wakefield ran out of baking chocolate one day in 1930, she smashed up a bar of semi-sweet chocolate and added the pieces to her dough. Upon their removal from the oven, the cookies weren’t uniformly infused with melted chocolate, but rather studded with little chunks throughout. The signature sweet put her Whitman, Massachusetts inn on the culinary map.

POTATO CHIPS
Back in 1853, a customer at Saratoga Springs’ Moon’s Lake House had a chip on his shoulder. He sent batch after batch of fried potatoes back, claiming they weren’t up to his crunch standards. Fed-up chef George Crum sliced the final batch as thinly as possible, sizzled them in hot grease and laid on a healthy measure of salt. The then much more chipper customer proclaimed these crispy ‘taters a hit, and they quickly became a hit all throughout the region.

POPSICLES
One chilly night in 1905, eleven-year-old Frank Epperson left his soda making  equipment outside on his San Francisco porch. The next day, he found that stick with which he’d been stirring flavored powder into water had frozen upright in the mixture. In 1924, he applied for a patent for this "Epsicle," which he then redubbed "Popsicle," supposedly at the urging of his children.

CORN FLAKES
Strict Seventh Day Adventists John Harvey and Will Keith Kellogg weren’t about to waste the stale, boiled wheat Will had left sitting out at their Battle Creek Sanitarium. They attempted to make long sheets of dough, but the process resulted in flakes, which they then toasted. Patients loved the new dish, and after experimenting with various grains, including corn, the brothers sought a patent for this Granose. The Kellogg’s company was formed in 1906, but John refused to take part, as he felt the addition of sugar to the corn flakes decreased their health benefit.

BEER
About 10,000 years ago, Mesopotamians abandoned their nomadic ways and became the world’s first agrarian society. Stored grains for bread became wet, and began to naturally ferment. Some hardy soul dared to drink the frothing mess, thus knocking back the world’s very first brewski.

COFFEE
The truth of this one is a bit murky, but the Legend of Kaldi maintains that an Abyssian or Ethopian goat herder noticed that his flock was acting especially frisky after chowing down on some bright red berries. After sampling some for himself and verifying the mood shift, he brought the berries to a local imam who studied them, eventually roasting and boiling a batch in water, thus brewing up the original cup o’ joe.

RAISINS
As early as 1490 B.C., Egyptian writings mentioned raisins being used as food, medicine, sporting contest awards, temple decor and tax payment. Evidence suggests that unharvested grapes were found dried on the vine, and determined to be sweet and delicious.

CHEESE
Pleased by cheese? It was likely discovered when an Arabian nomad toted along some milk in a container made from an animal’s stomach lining. The liquid hardened along the way in reaction to rennet - a naturally occurring stomach enzyme, making for the world’s first fromage.

SANDWICHES
Rumor has it that John Montagu, the 4th Earl of Sandwich found leaving the gambling table to be a royal pain, so he ordered meat to be delivered to him between slices of bread. An alternate tale suggests that work matters kept him pinned to his desk, thus necessitating the fork-free meal.

CHOCOLATE
Shards of Honduran pottery indicate that as far back as 1100 B.C., beer makers used cacao pods to ferment into beer. About 300 years later, a thrifty soul reclaimed the previously discarded seeds to brew into a non-alcoholic beverage all their own. Little did they suspect that they were in fact cooking up an obsession for the ages.

TOFU
While it’s impossible to pinpoint the particulars, one popular origin story maintains that in ancient China boiled, ground soybeans were accidentally mixed with impure sea salt containing calcium and magnesium salts, causing the slurry to gel. Another legend has it that a different Chinese cooked mistakenly dropped nigari, a natural coagulant, into a pot of soybean milk, resulting in a surprisingly edible curdle.

BRANDY
In the 17th century, vintners would boil their wine before shipping in order to lessen its volume (and the associated taxes) in Dutch cargo holds. It would then be reconstituted with water on the receiving end. What they didn’t expect was that the subsequent trip in the wooden casks substantially transformed and improved the original  product. 

WORCESTERSHIRE SAUCE
Former Bengal colonial governor Lord Marcus Sandy was, upon returning to England, pining for his favorite Indian sauce and commissioned drugstore owners John Lea and William Perrins to recreate it from his descriptions. They’d hoped to sell it in their store, but the stench was too powerful, and they stashed it in their basement for two years. During this time, it aged and improved radically in flavor and odor and became a hit with their customers.

ICE CREAM CONES
During 1904’s St. Louis World’s Fair, Syrian pastry vendor Ernest Hamwi helped out a nearby ice cream seller who’d run short on dishes. He rolled his pastry into a cone so the ice cream could be scooped inside. It was a hit, but Italian immigrant Italo Marchiony had also arrived at that combo, acquiring a patent for an ice cream cone earlier in the year.
 

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