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A Dark ‘n Stormy Recipe For International Dark ‘n’ Stormy Day

June 9th is International Dark ‘n’ Stormy® Day, honoring one of the few cocktails (photo #1) whose name is actually trademarked*—in this case, by Goslings Rum’s Rum. And it’s such a simple recipe: just two ingredients, Black Seal Rum and Stormy Ginger Beer.

It’s the national drink of Bermuda.

The drink is so popular that Goslings has a ready-to-drink canned Dark ‘n’ Stormy (7% ABV; $9.99 SRP, photo #4), and even a Dark ‘n’ Stormy Happy Hour Gift Box.

Stormy, by the way, is the name of the seal on the label of Goslings† Black Seal Rum, and the ginger beer was named for him. It’s the best-selling ginger beer brand in the U.S., and it’s our favorite brand, too. It has just the right amount of spiciness.

Goslings Stormy Ginger Beer also is made zero-calorie diet version, which is so delicious that we no longer buy bland diet ginger ale. Diet Goslings Stormy Diet Ginger Beer is a zero-calorie miracle.

> The history of the Dark ‘n’ Stormy is below.

> The history of rum.

> The history of ginger beer is also below.

> The different types of rum.
 
 
RECIPE: THE DARK ‘N’ STORMY

Ingredients Per Drink

  • 6 ounces Goslings Stormy Ginger Beer (or substitute brand, or Diet Stormy Ginger Beer)
  • 2 ounces Goslings Black Seal Rum
  • Optional: Lime wedge
  •  
    Preparation

    1. FILL a tall glass with ice. Pour the ginger beer into the glass and float the rum on top.

    2. STIR until it looks like a storm cloud. Garnish with the lime wedge.
     
     
    THE DARK ‘N’ STORMY HISTORY

    According to the company website, the Dark ‘n’ Stormy was invented in the 1920s, when more adventurous members of the British Navy stationed on Bermuda started adding Goslings Black Seal Rum to the ginger beer they brewed to combat seasickness (ginger beer is very low in alcohol).

    It turned out that Gosling’s Black Seal Rum, with its molasses flavor notes, was the perfect complement to the sizzling ginger beer.

    The Dark ‘n’ Stormy allegedly got its name from an old sailor who compared the drink’s murky hue to the color of a storm. It’s just a legend, but everything needs an origin story, even if you have to make one up.

    And the drink does look like a storm cloud in a glass.
     
     
    The Journey Begins

    Who created Gosling’s Black Seal dark rum?

    In the spring of 1806 James Gosling, the oldest son of William Gosling, a wine and spirits merchant, set out from Gravesend, Kent, England on the ship Mercury, with £10,000 sterling worth of merchandise, bound to set up shop in America.

    After 91 days on calm seas—unable to move because there was no wind—the ship’s charter (the period of time for which the ship was hired to transport goods from the vessel’s owner) ran out.

    The ship put in at the nearest port, St. George’s, Bermuda. James liked it enough to stay and open shop there, instead of re-chartering a boat and heading to America.

    Brother Ambrose Gosling arrived to join the business in 1824, and the shop was moved to Hamilton. The brothers entered the rum production business in 1857.

    The firm, first known as Gosling and Son, was later renamed Gosling Brothers.

    In 1860, after much experimentation in the blending process, the distinctive black rum that would later be named Black Seal was ready for sale [source].

    After much experimentation in the blending process, the distinctive black rum destined to be Black Seal was formulated and offered for sale [source].

    Up until the First World War the rum was sold from the barrel, and folks brought in bottles to be filled (note that many products were scooped from the barrel, from sugar and flour to coffee and crackers–hence the brand Cracker Barrel).

    Eventually, the black rum was sold in Champagne bottles, reclaimed empties from the British Officer’s Mess. The corks were sealed with black sealing wax. People began asking for the “Black Seal,” and it became the name of the rum.

    Many years later, a play on words and images gave birth to the little, barrel juggling black seal logo. The seal subsequently was named Stormy, and gave its name to Goslings Stormy Ginger Beer.

    Today, Goslings Black Seal Rum is made in 80 proof and 151 proof.

    The business is run by Malcolm Gosling, the 8th generation rum maker.
     
     
    THE HISTORY OF GINGER BEER

    Originating in the tropics of Southeast Asia, ginger root was introduced to the Caribbean and Africa in the 15th century.

    The Brits first fermented it into an alcoholic beverage (just ginger root, sugar, and water).

     

    Dark n Stormy Recipe Rum Cocktail
    [1] Dark ‘n’ Stormy is one of four cocktails with a U.S. Patent Office trademark on their name and recipe. The other three are in the *footnote below (photos #1, #4, and #5 © Goslings Rum).

    Dark 'n Stormy Recipe Cocktail
    [2] There are just two ingredients in a Dark ‘n’ Stormy cocktail: Goslings Black Seal Rum and ginger beer. Plus an optional lime wedge for garnish (photo © Reserve Bar).

    Dark n Stormy Cocktail With A Bottle Of Goslings Black Seal Rum
    [3] The seal, who is balancing a rum barrel on its nose, is called Stormy (photo © Love Drinks).

    Dark n Stormy Canned Cocktail
    [4] Available in cans, the Dark ‘n’ Story is the official rum cocktail of the Boston Red Socks.

    Poached Pears With Goslings Run Recipe
    [5] You can use Goslings Black Seal Rum in many other drinks, and in recipes like these poached pears. Here’s the recipe.

     
    Ginger beer became another favorite drink of the British, and was exported worldwide in strong, earthenware bottles [source].

    Among other places in England that produced ginger beer, there was a ginger beer factory that was operated as a subsidiary of the Royal Naval Officer’s Club [source]!

    Ginger beer’s spicy-and-sweet flavor makes it an excellent mixer for cocktails and mocktails.

    Because of varying jurisdictional laws, check to see if the bottle of ginger beer you pick up is alcoholic or the equivalent of a soft drink.

  • Most modern ginger beers contain either no alcohol or less than .5%, although some are over 4% (check these out).
  • Even non-alcoholic ginger beer is spicier with more intense flavor than commercial ginger ale.
  • Ginger beer is carbonated naturally via fermentation. Soft drinks are artificially carbonated.
  •  
    Our favorite easy-to-find, non-alcoholic ginger beer, Goslings, is also available in a sugar-free, non-caloric version (using sucralose and acesulfame potassium).
     
     
    ________________

    *There are three cocktails protected by trademark. The other three are the Hand Grenade, the Painkiller, and the Sazerac.

    †What’s the deal with Gosling versus Goslings? While the family is named Gosling, when they called their brand Goslings, they decided to eliminate the apostrophe. As editors, we don’t approve—but no one consulted us. We also disagree with the trademarked spelling of Dark ‘n Stormy. Since ‘n is used as a contraction of “and,” it should be ‘n.’
     
    Dark & Stormy Recipe
    [6] How to mark a Dark ‘n’ Story (infographic © National Today).
     
     

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    Portillo’s Garden Dog: A Plant-Based Hot Dog, Dressed To Kill

    Portillo's Garden Dog Plant Based Hot Dog
    [1] Portillo’s new plant-based Garden Dog tastes just like a regular hot dog—delish! (photos #1, #2, and #3 © Portillo’s).

    Portillo's Garden Dog Plant Based Hot Dog
    [2] Time for lunch!

    Portillo's Garden Dog Plant Based Hot Dog
    [3] Close-up on the toppings: mustard, relish, chopped onions, tomatoes, celery salt, pickle spear, and sport peppers, on a steamed poppy seed bun.

    Plant Based Hot Dog
    [4] You can actually buy the dogs wherever Field Roast products are sold (photos #4, #5, and #6 © Field Roast)…

    Field Roast Plant Based Hot Dog
    [5] …and create your own garnishes. Take a look at some topping options.


    [6] Classic garnishes on Field Roast’s Stadium Dogs.

     

    It seems that every burger chain now has a plant-based burger, but what about the hog dogs? Hot dog lovers are finally getting a plant-based version of the iconic Chicago-style dog at Chicago-based fast-casual chain Portillo’s.

    According to the National Hot Dog and Sausage Council, Americans eat more than 7 billion hot dogs every year during ‘peak hot dog season,’ between Memorial Day and Labor Day.

    Portillo’s wants vegetarians, vegans, and others who don’t eat meat that its first-ever plant-based hot dog is ready to roll—or is that, ready in a roll?

    The chain has 70 outposts across nine states and is expanding, bringing their new meatless dog nationwide (see the locations).
     
     
    MEET THE GARDEN DOG

    The meatless dog, made by quality vegan meat pioneer Field Roast (long a NIBBLE favorite), is the best plant-based dog on the market, and was chosen by Portillo’s after tasting dozens of contenders.

    Called the Garden Dog, the plant-based hotdog is now available at Portillo’s restaurants nationwide.

    The “dog” in question is the Field Roast Signature Stadium Dog which we wrote about last year.

    It’s been custom-crafted for Portillo’s and topped with the same classic Chicago-style hot dog toppings as Portillo’s regular dog: mustard, relish, chopped onions, tomatoes, celery salt, pickle spear, and sport peppers, on a steamed poppy seed bun.

    Take a bite: You won’t even know that it isn’t a conventional hot dog, that’s how good it is. It is dee-licious!

    The dog, made for Portillo’s by Field Roast, a leader in premium grain-based meat alternatives, is a pea protein-based hot dog inspired by the flavors of premium, kosher-style beef hot dogs.

    Unlike other products that use liquid smoke, the dogs are double smoked using maple hardwood chips and a combination of steam and dry heat.

    The plant-based hot dog also offers the same amount of protein per serving as most traditional hot dogs, but contains less sodium and is made without nitrites or GMOs. Already available at retail stores nationwide, the Stadium Dog has been transformed into a Chicago-style Garden Dog at Portillo’s, with those great Chicago-dog toppings.

    Portillo’s established its reputation in Chicago as a hot dog stand in the 1960s, and today is known for its hot dogs, Italian beef sandwiches and chocolate cake at its more than 70 locations across nine states.
     
     
    HOT DOG VS. FRANKFURTER VS. WIENER VS. BRAT:
    THE DIFFERENCE

    In the beginning, there was the frankfurter, or Frankfort-style sausage, a slender pork sausage popularized in Frankfurt, Germany. But first, there were Viennese sausages.

    The hot dog traces its lineage to the 15th-century Viennese sausage, or Wienerwurst in German.

    In the 17th century, Johann Georghehner, a butcher from the German city of Coburg, in Bavaria, is credited with inventing the “dachshund” or “little dog” sausage and bringing it with him to Frankfort—hence, a Frankfort sausage, which became frankfurter in the U.S.; and the word wiener was also used.

    Both names still referred to a sausage eaten with a knife and fork like other German sausages—no bun.

    The hot dog, a slender sausage in a bun, was undeniably an American invention. The attribution is given to a German immigrant named Charles Feltman, who began selling grab-and-go sausages in rolls at a stand in Coney Island in 1871.

    The 1893 World Exposition in Chicago marked the debut of the hot dog vendor. According to National Hot Dog and Sausage Council, it was around this time that the hot dog made its first appearance at a ballpark, at a St. Louis Browns game.

    The first published mention of the term “hot dog” as a food (as opposed to a canine) first appeared in print in a September 1893 issue of The Knoxville Journal. Here’s more history of the hot dog.

    What about brats? Brat is short for bratwurst, a type of German sausage that’s wider than a hot dog. Here’s more about the difference between bratwurst and hot dogs.
     
     
    Frankfurter-Hot Dog Difference

    The main differences between a frankfurter and a hot dog are the ingredients and flavors.

    German sausages are pork- and veal-based. Lamb-producing countries make lamb sausage, countries with seashores make seafood sausages.

    While the U.S. offers every kind of hot dog, from beef to pork, to beef-pork blends, to poultry, the majority of hot dogs tend to be all beef or a mixture of meat trimmings from beef and/or pork.

    There are also “gourmet” hot dogs made from high-end pork like Berkshire and Kurobuta, and beef versions made from Kobe and Wagyu.

    The main differences between a hot dog and a sausage are the production process and seasonings. Here’s what’s in the typical beef hot dog.

    The most common spices used in hit digs include allspice, cinnamon, coriander, cumin, garlic, nutmeg, paprika, and pepper (black, red, and white) [source].
     
     
    HOT DOG TRIVIA

  • Los Angeles residents consume more hot dogs than any other city (about 30 million pounds), beating out New York and Dallas.
  • During peak hot dog season, from Memorial Day to Labor Day, Americans typically consume 7 billion hot dogs. That’s 818 hot dogs consumed every second during that period!
  • Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport consumes SIX times more hot dogs, 725,000 more than Los Angeles International Airport and LaGuardia Airport combined.
  • On Independence Day, Americans will enjoy 150 million hot dogs, enough to stretch from D.C. to L.A. more than five times [source].
  •  

     
     

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    What Is A Tamarillo & Tamarillo Recipes

    In a specialty grocer near you, you may find a colorful stack of New Zealand tamarillos (Cyphomandra betacea)—a relative of tomatoes that looks like a plum tomato, hence its original name, “tree tomato.”

    Tamarillo, a fruit resembling an oversized plum or a plum tomato, is native to South America, where it has long been used in sweet and savory dishes.

    While it is an everyday food south of the border, in the U.S., beyond Latino supermarkets, it is sold as an exotic fruits.

    A member of the Nightshade family (Solanaceae), it’s a relative of the chile, eggplant, potato, and tomato, the tamarillo is native to Central and South America.

    They can be found in various shades of amber, purple, red, and yellow, all with a green stem.

    If you live in UDSA Zones 10-11, the winter-hardy trees will be a beautiful addition to your garden, with fragrant blossoms greeting you in springtime before the fruits arrive.

    > The history of tamarillos is below.
     
     
    HOW TO TAMARILLOS TASTE?

    They are naturally tangy, but still can be eaten fresh (once the glossy but bitter skin is removed) or cooked. Like grapefruit, fresh tamarillos can be sprinkled with sugar.

    The apricot-colored, meaty flesh is soft and juicy. Like pears and stone fruits, they yield to slight pressure when ripe.

    Some call the flavor a cross between a tomato and a tart strawberry.

    Melissa’s Produce, which sells fruits from all over the world, calls the flavor of tamarillo “habit-forming.”

    One tamarillo has just 30 calories and is packed with vitamins A (more than 100% DV) and C (50% DV). It is also rich in beta carotene and vitamin E.

    Choose fragrant, heavy fruits. Once ripened at room temperature, they can be refrigerated for up to 10 days, tightly wrapped in plastic.

    Tamarillo season runs from now through the fall.

    If you can’t find tamarillos locally you can purchase them online from specialty produce companies like Melissa’s.
     
     
    WAYS TO USE TAMARILLOS

    Tamarillos can be enjoyed in sweet or savory recipes, Tamarillos can be used in recipes for breakfast, lunch, dinner, and dessert.

    It can be used in anything from chutneys, salsa, and other condiments to mains, beverages, and desserts: cakes, pies, puddings, and more.

    It’s easy to peel and slice one into a green salad. We just made one with mixed greens, fennel, sweet onion, basil, and a honey balsamic vinaigrette.

    Chef Shawn McClain of Chicago’s Spring restaurant serves a salad of tamarillo and fennel dressed with aged balsamic vinegar and Manuka honey.

  • Grilled Tamarillo À La Mode
  • Red Tamarillo Caprese Salad
  • Roast Tamarillo Soup with Greek Yoghurt & Crispy Chickpea Croutons (photo #7)
  • Tamarillo & Apricot Crumble
  • Tamarillo & Apricot Jam
  • Tamarillo Cooler
  • Tamarillo, Gorgonzola, Butternut & Mozzarella Tart (photo #2)
  • Tamarillo Pudding Parfait
  • Tamarillo Salad Dressing
  • Tamarillo Salsa (photo #5)
  • Tamarillo Smoothie
  • Tamarillo Tiramisu
  • Walnut Crust Cheesecake with Macerated Tamarillos (photo #6)
  •  
    There are many more recipes on Tamarillo.com.
     
     
    RECIPE: EASY TAMARILLO SALSA

    This simple recipe is delicious chicken, fish, or meats. Try on a burger, sandwich, with cold cuts, or a cheese plate; and of course, with tortilla chips.

    Ingredients

  • 4 tamarillos
  • 1 onion
  • 1 tbsp brown sugar
  •  
    Preparation

    1. PEEL and chop the tamarillos and onion finely.

    2. ADD the brown sugar and mix well.

    3. REFRIGERATE to let the flavors meld.

    Recipe by Glenda Gourley for the New Zealand Tamarillo Growers Association.
     
     
    TAMARILLO HISTORY

    Tamarillos are ancient food. The tree tomato (tomate de arbol) is listed among the “lost crops of the Incas†” because the as tomate de arbol (tree tomato) has all but disappeared from their native Peruvian habitat. They are still grown, commercially, elsewhere in South America.

    A shrub or semi-woody tree that reaches heights between 10 and 18 feet, tamarillo trees bloom in early spring, producing fragrant pink flowers.

    Tamarillos spread west from South America to Asia, and then south to Australia and New Zealand. They were first introduced into New Zealand from Asia in the late 1800s.
     
    Tamarillos Find A Home In New Zealand

    Originally only yellow and purple-fruited strains that originated in South America were produced. The red tamarillo was developed in the 1920s by an Auckland nurseryman, using the seeds from the South American varieties.

    Other red strains appeared soon afterward and were bred into the large, quality varieties grown in New Zealand today.

    The commercial production of tamarillos began on a small scale in the 1930s. During World War II, demand for tamarillos grew, when the supply of other fruits high in vitamin C was restricted and sent to the troops.
     
    From Tree Tomato To Tamarillo

    Although tamarillos are from South America, the name is not Spanish, but a New Zealand invention.

    The fruit was originally known as tree tomato. But to avoid confusion with the garden tomato, and to increase appeal to export customers, in 1967 the New Zealand Tree Tomato Promotions Council decided to rename it.

    A council member came up with ‘“tamarillo,” feeling that it sounded both Māori (honoring its New Zealand roots) and Spanish (South American roots).

    In the horticultural boom of the 1970s fruit production increased markedly which led to increasing professionalism among growers with an emphasis on pest control and quality management systems.

    The fruit is popular in New Zealand thanks to its unique, attractive flavor and nutritional qualities.

    Tamarillos are grown on a commercial scale in Colombia and Ecuador, with smaller plantings in Africa, Asia, Australia, and California [New Zealand Tamarillo Growers Association].

     


    [1] They may look like exotic grapes, but tamarillos are the size of plums (photos #1, #2, #5, #6, and #7 © New Zealand Tamarillo Growers Association).


    [2] Tamarillos can be used in savory or sweet recipes. This savory tart recipe combines tamarillo with Gorgonzola and mozzarella cheeses and butternut squash.

    Purple Tamarillos
    [3] A purple tamarillo. No matter the color, all tamarillos have green stems (photo courtesy Free Images).

    Tamarillos On Tree
    [4] Tamarillos on the tree (photo © Melodi2 | Morguefile).

    Tamarillo Salsa Recipe
    [5] Tamarillo salsa, for chicken, fish, meats and more. Here’s the recipe.

    Tamarillo Recipes
    [6] Cheesecake with a walnut crust and a topping of sweet macerated tamarillos. Here’s the recipe.

    Tamarillo Recipes
    [7] Roast Tamarillo Soup with Greek Yoghurt & Crispy Chickpea Croutons. Here’s the recipe.

     
     
    ________________

    *The Nightshade family, Solanaceae, is a family of flowering plants. Many of their fruits, pods, or roots are edible, while others contain the alkaloid solanine, which is toxic in high concentrations (as in the deadly nightshade, or belladonna, and the tobacco plant). Edible members include the cape gooseberry, capsicum (chile), eggplant, goji berry, potato, tamarillo and tomatillo, and tomato, among others.

    †Crops cultivated across the Inca Empire included avocado, beans, carob, cashews, chiles, chirimoya, coca, cotton, cucumber, gourd, grains, guayabo, lúcuma, maize, mashwa, oca, peanuts, potatoes, quinoa, squash, sweet potatoes, tomatoes, talwi, and ulluco. Here’s more about Inca farming. Here’s a book, Lost Crops Of The Incas, that you can read free online or download. An excerpt follows:

    …Pizarro and most of the later Spaniards who conquered Peru repressed the Indians, suppressed their traditions, and destroyed much of the intricate agricultural system. …Crops that had held honored positions in Indian society for thousands of years were deliberately replaced by European species (notably wheat, barley, carrots, and broad beans) that the conquerors demanded be grown.

    Forced into obscurity were at least a dozen native root crops, three grains, three legumes, and more than a dozen fruits. Domesticated plants such as oca, maca, tarwi, nuñas, and lucuma have remained in the highlands for the almost 500 years or so since Pizarro’s conquest (1533). Lacking a modern constituency, they have received little scientific respect, research, or commercial advancement. Yet they include some widely adaptable, extremely nutritious, and remarkably tasty foods” [from “Lost Crops of the Incas: Little-Known Plants of the Andes with Promise for Worldwide Cultivation,” National Research Council, 1989, Washington, DC: The National Academies Press, Introduction, p. 1].

     
     

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    Food Fun: Chocolate Ice Cream Recipes For National Chocolate Ice Cream Day

    Chocolate Ice Cream Cone
    [1] Dark chocolate ice cream (both photos © Clementine’s Creamery | St. Louis).

    Chocolate Ice Cream With Chocolate Stout
    [2] Drink a chocolate stout with your chocolate ice cream.

     

    June 7th is National Chocolate Ice Cream Day, so we’re sharing some of our favorite chocolate ice cream recipes.

    Of course, eating chocolate ice cream straight from the pint is a perfectly good idea.

    Or add a couple of scoops to a glass and top with root beer for a yummy root beer float.

    Pour a few shots of espresso over a scoop and you’ve got affogato.

    > July is National Ice Cream Month.

    > The third Sunday of July is National Ice Cream Day.

    > The different types of ice cream and frozen desserts.

    > The history of ice cream.
     
     
    CHOCOLATE ICE CREAM RECIPES

    Customize Your Chocolate Ice Cream With Mix-Ins

    Chocolate Ice Cubes In Vanilla Milk

    Chocolate Fried Ice Cream

    Chocolate Peanut Butter Ice Cream & Frozen Peanut Butter Cups

    Chocolate Stout Beer Float

    Chocolate Swirl Ice Cream Recipe

    Ice Cream & Beer Pairings

    No Churn Chocolate Brownie Ice Cream Recipe

    Rocky Road ice creams With Mix-Ins

    S’mores Chocolate Ice Cream Cake

     

     
     

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    Milk Carton History To Celebrate National Dairy Month

    June is National Dairy Month, so how about some fun facts? Let’s start with milk delivery.

    In the late 1700s, every American household had a cow. A prosperous family might have two. As industrialization moved people into more urban areas, there wasn’t anywhere to keep a family cow. That’s when people began to buy milk from local dairy farmers instead.

    The history of the milk carton (photo #8) follows.

    > There’s fun milk trivia below.
     
     
    MILK FROM A BARREL IN A HORSE-DRAWN WAGON

    The first home milk deliveries in the U.S. occurred in Vermont in 1785. The milkman in a horse-drawn wagon would go door to door with a metal barrel full of milk. People would come out with their containers to get milk, or leave whatever containers they had—jugs, pails, or jars—on their front steps, and the milkman would fill them.

    Daily deliveries were required, because, in the days before refrigeration, the milk wouldn’t keep until the next day (cold winter days excepted).

    While it was possible for visitors to dairies to purchase fresh milk packaged in jars*, this was in limited volume and not “commercial distribution.”

    The first milk bottle in the U.S. is credited to Harvey D. Thatcher, a New York druggist who introduced his milk bottle in 1884. The story is that Thatcher was disgusted after watching a milkman dip from a milk can into which a child’s toy had dropped, and was motivated to create a solution.

    There were numerous patented milk jars prior to Thatcher’s, but his was the first to include a cap [source].

    Early Thatcher “milk protector” bottles used a now-familiar ball-type closure (also called a swing stopper) affixed by wires (photo #5). His bottle was embossed with a Quaker farmer milking a cow. Great idea, the swing stopper; but alas, Thatcher failed to patent his invention. (The same type of bottle is used today for other beverages, including beer).

    But his legacy was that for which many collectors of old milk bottles are thankful. Soon, more dairies began to create their own proprietary designs. By the 1920s both designs and advertisements were etched onto the bottles.

    The first glass milk bottle granted a patent was the Lester Milk Jar (photo #4), designed by George Henry Lester and patented on January 29, 1878. More complicated than the Thatcher, the glass bottle had a glass lid that was held in place with a metal clamp-pressure screw device. It went into commercial use the following year.

    In today’s environment of throw-it-away, it’s nice to remember that in the old days, the empty bottles were picked up, returned to the farm or plant, and washed for re-use.

    The glass bottles made it easier for milkmen to make their deliveries, and for the dairy farms to keep track of how much to charge customers.

    Customers left standing orders, and milkmen carried the milk and cream in metal baskets (photo #6), placing them into insulated galvanized steel boxes (photo #7) on the front or back porch, without disturbing the household during the early morning delivery. Some homes had insulated cubbies built into the side of the house.

    Families woke up to fresh milk.

    While glass milk bottles were almost unanimously clear, for a while, some amber-colored milk bottles were produced, in response to the now-disproved belief that dark glass would keep milk from spoiling when exposed to light (in fact, heat, not light, is the culprit). There were also rare occasions when white milk glass and green glass bottles were used [source].
     
     
    THE FIRST PAPER MILK CARTON

    Waxed cardboard containers for milk started to appear as early as the 1890s, but before the homogenization† of milk in the 1920s and the sale of separate pints of cream, customers couldn’t see the milk inside, to see how much cream they were getting (the cream layer rose to the top).

    In 1915 John Van Wormer, a toy manufacturer in Toledo, Ohio, was granted the first patent for a “paper bottle,” which was the first folded blank box for holding milk. He called it the “Pure-Pak.”

    He was motivated to create a cardboard carton after dropping a glass bottle of milk. He created the machinery to make the cartons, which were delivered to dairies in flattened form.

    The dairy then folded, filled, and sealed the cartons. Because the cartons could be thrown away instead of reused, Wormer’s called his product the “Pure-Pak.”

    In 1928, Sheffield Farms in New York began using waxed cardboard cartons for their milk deliveries, but the glass milk bottle continued to be the main container of retail distribution for many decades.

    By the 1940s, waxed cardboard containers with peak rooftops became common (today plastic is substituted). This design, though, had actually been around since 1915 [source].

    By the 1940s and 1950s
    , glass milk bottles were supplanted by waxed-paper cartons.

    Even though most homes had refrigerators, some families preferred to continue having their milk delivered by the milkman. (Surprisingly, home delivery of milk is having a renaissance, as some families want fresh milk produced locally, instead of a conglomerate of interstate dairies who send their milk to a distribution plant to be blending with other dairies’ milks. If you’re interested, you can find a home delivery dairy here.)

    In the mid-1960s, single-use plastic milk jugs were introduced.

    The end of the 1960s also saw the demise of the milkman, as suburban sprawl made delivery routes longer and less financially feasible, while supermarkets made it convenient for consumers to get their own milk.

    In 1989, Peapod became one of the early online grocery delivery services. Today’s market leader, Fresh Direct, began in 2002. Amazon Fresh arrived in 2007.

    And this, dear reader, is known as a paradigm shift.
     
     
    MILK TRIVIA

  • While different breeds are more prolific than others, a typical cow produces an average of 6.3 gallons of milk daily. That’s more than 2,300 gallons each year, and 350,000 glasses of milk in her lifetime.
  • U.S. dairy farms produce roughly 21 billion gallons of milk annually.
  • However, farmers measure milk in pounds, not gallons, due to tradition. Most farmers want their cows to produce 60 to 65 pounds of milk a day.
  • To produce those 60 pounds of milk, cows eat about 100 pounds of food every day and drink 50 gallons of water.
  • To get the amount of calcium in an 8-ounce glass of milk, you’d have to eat one-fourth cup of broccoli, seven oranges, or six slices of whole wheat bread.
  • The average American consumes almost 25 gallons of milk a year.
  • Milk will stay fresher longer if you add a pinch of salt to the quart.
  • A cow is more valuable for its dairy products—milk, butter, cheese, ice cream, and yogurt—than for its beef.
  • It takes about 10 pounds of milk to make one pound of cheese and just over 21 pounds to make a pound of butter. That’s why butter is relatively expensive.
  •  
    [Source: American Farm Bureau]
     
     
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    *There is information on the Internet that on April 8th, 1879, Echo Farms Dairy of Litchfield, Connecticut was the first to home-deliver bottled milk. However, despite research by the Connecticut Historical Board, no hard information has been found to substantiate this claim. However, an 1879 ad from the dairy does mention that the milk was sold in cans [source].

    †Homogenization does not affect the composition of the milk. It only changes the size of the fat globules, making them more uniform. Thus, the fat will remain more evenly dispersed throughout the milk and will not rise to the top or cling to the sides of the container.
     
     
     
     
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    Pitcher & Glass Of Milk & Butter For National Dairy Month
    [1] Two of the main dairy foods: milk and butter. Imagine our cuisine without them (photo © Dreamstime).

    Glass Milk Bottle & Milk Carton History
    [2] A modern glass milk bottle. See two of the earliest versions below (photo © Ahmadreza Rezaie | Unsplash).

    Old Milk Cans For Milk Carton History
    [3] Milk cans were filled with milk at the dairy, carried to homes by horse and wagaon (and later railroads), and ladeled into customers’ own containers (photo © Ian Spielberg | Collectors Weekly).

    Lester Milk Jar For Milk Carton History
    [4] The first patented milk bottle was a jar, with a metal clamp mechanism (photo © Cook’s Info).

    Thatcher Milk Protector Bottle For National Dairy Month
    [5] Next to be patented was the Thatcher Milk Protector Bottle (photo © Haint Blue Vintage | Etsy).

    Old Fashioned Milk Bottle Carrier For Milk Carton History
    [6] The milkman carried milk and cream from his wagon or truck with a metal basket (photo © Fleatique | Etsy).

    Galvanized Steel Milk  Box For Milk Carton History
    [7] Milk deliveries were made into galvanized steel, insulated storage bins, typically set on the back porch. This is an early style. Simpler boxes in grey-color steel came later (photo © 80 Acre Market).

    Modern Milk Carton - Milk Carton History
    [8] Where we are today: Modern cartons are made mainly from paper. Gable-top (refrigerated) cartons contain additional layers of plastic, while aseptic (shelf-stable) cartons contain additional layers of plastic and an thin aluminum lining (photo © Organic Valley).

     

      

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