Truly Traditional Molasses Popcorn. A Favorite Since the 1870s.

$8.47

Out of stock

Enjoy honest old-time popcorn, planted, popped and packaged in Appalachia on a small family farm where the stalks grow in clean air. Unlike other packaged popcorn, ours takes the journey from farm to bag in a matter of days. Our popcorn is popped in small batches, of course, and never sits in a warehouse or gets pushed through a conveyor belt before reaching you. In fact, our popcorn is popped only minutes away from the small family farm where it grew. It’s crunchy. It’s fresh. It’s delicious. AND it’s naturally non-GMO. What could compare?

Molasses Popcorn… brought to you by the nation’s ONLY researched-based historic candy company. Our founder, Susan Benjamin, is the author of numerous articles, even a book on the subject (her tenth) on Smithsonian’s Best Books About Food. Everything you get from True Treats is the best possible, most delicious version of her scholarly research – Molasses Popcorn is no exception. True Treats products are sold in museum gift stores across the county. Enjoyed in homes everywhere!”

 

About that molasses flavor: Molasses is THE traditional popcorn sweetener and you can taste it in every crunchy morsel. It’s sweet but not cloying, like some modern, commercial popcorns, with a delicious popcorn scent. And because our popcorn is fresh from the farm, it tastes uniquely delicious.

 

 

Description

When did people start using molasses in popcorn?

Molasses – made from the remnants of sugar cane production – was once considered a lesser form of sweetener. After the Civil War, molasses became ever more popular as a flavor and a healthy, even medicinal, addition to food. Molasses first made an appearance in popcorn in the 1870s. Among others, Frederick Rueckheim used molasses in an early “popcorn brick.” Rueckheim’s company later made a favorite molasses-based popcorn and peanut blend called “Cracker Jacks.”

When did American start eating popcorn?

Native Americans popped corn for untold years, by placing the kernels in hot sand, as only one example. When the settlers arrived, they were not greeted by bowls of popcorn, as some suggested, and no evidence exists that popcorn was served at the first Thanksgiving table. BUT – the Colonist did eat popcorn, most notably as cereal, served with cream and sugar. Popcorn took off in the mid-1800s and found a place in the budding American fun-food kingdom at the end of the 19th century, thanks, in part, to industrialization and the making of portable popcorn poppers.

 

Did you know:

  • The first use of corn by humans was popcorn.
  • Popcorn was the second snack food known to Americans. Peanuts were the first.
  • Popcorn is one of the healthiest snack/fun foods around – high in fiber and low in calories.
  • Popcorn is exceptionally popular – according to a recent study, 92% of people surveyed like popcorn.
  • Today, popcorn is the highest selling snack food by volume.

 

What were the first flavors popcorn flavors people enjoyed?

The first commercial popcorn may have been “sugared”  or coated with molasses, but most was salted and buttered, much like the popcorn of today.  By the end of the 19th century, a universe of possibilities appeared, including the molasses and peanut based Cracker Jacks, made commercially and at home. Other favorites evolved in rapid order such as chocolate-covered, still popular today. In the early 1900s, other flavors emerged, such as caramel popcorn.

When did people start eating popcorn in movie theaters?

Popcorn vendors appeared outside movie houses since the beginning of movies. Movie house proprietors tolerated them, but didn’t want them actually inside where their popcorn would litter the floor. Their sentiment evolved gradually – some allowed  vendors to walk up and down the aisles selling their popcorn, much like vendors at ballgames still do today. Others let them sell popcorn in the lobbies. Then came the Depression. Movie house owners were strapped for cash and popcorn was the answer. The smell welcomed people in. The price was affordable. And the the appeal… basically limitless. Movie theater popcorn became a staple, and still is, even in living room “theaters” at home. Today the microwavable variety has taken over for at-home viewing, with bagged popcorn right behind it.

Additional information

Weight 4 oz
Dimensions 4 × 4 × 4 in