Who invented pb
The combination is delicious, and, so far as I know, original. First, peanut butter itself changed. In , a guy named Joseph Rosefield figured out how to stop peanut butter from separating and going rancid by turning peanut oil into a saturated fat—this might have been not the best move health-wise, but it was a lot more convenient, and it didn't stick to the roof of your mouth as terribly as the original stuff had.
He named it Skippy. At the same time, the industry and the American economy in general expanded and became more commercialized, bringing peanut butter down into even the poorest family's price range, and manufacturers started adding more sugar to appeal to a kiddie palate. Then, in , someone well, two men— Otto Rohwedder and Gustav Papendick actually invented sliced bread , setting the bar high for all future inventions and making sandwiches infinitely easier and safer for kids to make.
Will be used in accordance with our user agreement and privacy policy. All rights reserved. I think they should be available to all peoples. Four different individuals are credited with helping to invent the peanut butter we know and love today.
Marcellus Gilmore Edson was a Canadian who, in , patented something called peanut paste, which sounds way less delicious, but which was basically the foundation for peanut butter. Missourian Dr. However, if you really want to go back to the beginning, there is evidence that the Aztecs took roasted peanuts and mashed them to create a blend.
He was one of the greatest inventors in American history, discovering over hundred uses for peanuts including chili sauce, shampoo, shaving cream and glue. He was a pioneer in the agricultural world and many refer to him as father of the peanut industry. The earliest reference to peanut butter can be traced back to the Ancient Incas and the Aztecs who ground roasted peanuts into a paste. However, modern peanut butter, its process of production and the equipment used to make it, can be credited to at least three inventors.
In Marcellus Gilmore Edson of Canada patented peanut paste, the finished product from milling roasted peanuts between two heated surfaces. In Dr. He marketed it as a nutritious protein substitute for people who could hardly chew on solid food.
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