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Before Jell-O, Making Gelatin Dishes Took Hours — and Hooves

Being able to buy a gelatin product eased a once-daunting process, says Sarah Wassberg Johnson, an author, speaker, educator, podcaster and blogger known as The Food Historian. “Prior to the development of commercially powdered or granulated gelatin, creating gelatin-based desserts was extraordinarily labor-intensive and time-consuming.” It involved “boiling beef bones or hooves for hours, chilling the stock, skimming the fat, and then heating again to clarify the gelatin and remove any meat flavor before adding to custards and fruit juices and placing in fancy molds and chilling a second time.”
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It Was Invented in the 19th Century

Parent company Kraft Heinz shared a few key dates that predated Jell-O’s history but were important to its development. These include 1845, when Peter Cooper, inventor of the renowned locomotive “Tom Thumb,” obtained the first patent for a gelatin dessert. In 1895, Pearle B. Wait, a cough syrup maker in LeRoy, New York, decided to enter the packaged-food business. Finally, Wait adapted Cooper’s 1845 patent for a gelatin dessert, which would become Jell-O. Wait’s wife, May Davis Wait, coined the name Jell-O, which started production in 1897.
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After Wait sold the business to Orator F. Woodward of the Genesee Pure Food Co. in 1899 for $450, Jell-O began to grow quickly. By 1902, sales hit $250,000 as Woodward began the first national advertising campaign for “America’s Most Famous Dessert” with a 3-inch ad in the Ladies Home Journal. On May 19, 1903, it became a registered U.S. trademark.
Jell-O and Its Competitors All Grew Out of One Area

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Its Uncomplicated Nature Made It Popular …

Noting “its enduring popularity,” Wassberg Johnson notes that “Jell-O really took off when electric refrigeration did in the 1920s and ’30s. The ease of making a dessert that only required hot water and time in the fridge was appealing to housewives who were increasingly doing without hired household help and therefore needed simpler, more expedient meals.”
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… And So Did Its Price Tag

There Have Been Dozens of Jell-O Flavors

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Its Lime Flavor Was an Instant Hit

Some flavors made quite a hit on their own. Wassberg Johnson says that as Jell-O expanded its flavor lineup, consumers bought in, especially in 1930, when lime Jell-O was introduced. “it became the most popular flavor almost immediately — I think in part because it had both sweet and more savory applications.”
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Early Advertising Campaigns Enlisted Famous Artists

Jell-O recipes became the rage in the early part of the 20th century, with recipe booklets often produced in vast quantities. Noted artists such as Maxfield Parrish and Norman Rockwell helped the brand advance with their evocative color illustrations.
Its Famous Slogan Debuted on a Popular Radio Program

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The Brand Eventually Added Pudding to Its Lineup

In 1936, General Foods introduced Jell-O pudding in regional markets. Chocolate came first, soon followed by vanilla and butterscotch. By the following year, they were available throughout America.
It Has Inspired Many a Culinary Creation — Notably, Salads

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Jell-O Shots Were ‘Invented’ in the 1950s

Ever had Jell-O shots? They substitute alcohol such as vodka or rum for a portion of water in the recipe — supposedly an invention by singer-songwriter Tom Lehrer “as a way to get around the alcohol restrictions” at Army bases where he was stationed in the ’50s, according to the website What’s Cooking America.
Its Popularity Declined, Prompting New Products

Starting in the 1960s, as sales began to fall, the brand started trying new things. Jell-O 1-2-3 was a product that would “magically” set into three layers of different consistencies and colors. Jell-O Pudding Pops soared to the national stage thanks to memorable commercials starring now-disgraced comic Bill Cosby. In the ’90s the brand — again using Cosby in its commercials — promoted Jell-O Jigglers molds in shapes with themes such as NASCAR, cartoon characters, animals, and the alphabet.
It’s Very Popular in Utah

Keep hearing about how popular Jell-O is in Utah? It was named the official Utah state snack food in 2001. What’s Cooking America explains that Kraft Foods’ sales figures showed Salt Lake City as having the highest per-capita Jell-O consumption, and that Mormons, in particular, seem especially fond of it. Why? Theories abound, including that it’s an acceptable substitute for vices such as caffeine and alcohol, and that it’s an easy dessert to make for large church gatherings, which are common in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.
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Its History Has Inspired Many Books

Can’t imagine a whole book on Jell-O? There’s more than one, including: “Jell-O: A Biography,” by Carolyn Wyman; “Jell-O Girls: A Family History,” by Allie Rowbottom (a descendant of Orator F. Woodward); and “Celebrating 100 Years of Jell-O” by Publications International.
It’s Been Used in Scientific Research

In the 1960s and ’70s, neurologist Adrian Upton used lime Jell-O — noting it would be more photogenic than other flavors — in an experiment meant to show that EEG brain fluctuations can be misleading. The New York Times picked up the story in 1976, writing that the doctor did “a brain wave analysis of a blob of lime Jell‐O and obtained readings that he said could be mistaken as evidence of life.”
Jell-O Has Traveled to Space

In 1996, Jell-O brand gelatin rocketed into space with U.S. astronaut Shannon Lucid on a 140-day mission to the Russian space station Mir, where, according to The Oklahoman newspaper, she prepared it every week.
It Has Its Own Museum

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Its Most Popular Flavor Is …

Which flavor is the favorite? The brand reports that it’s strawberry, and a crowdsourced competition over at Ranker.com agrees, with lime and berry blue following at second and third, respectively.
The Brand Has Gotten More Creative

In the summer of 2018, the brand launched Jell-O Play, a line of edible gelatin products designed to inspire families “to engage in free play and fun.” Featuring three lines that can be molded, shaped, and built into anything participants want based on themes such as the ocean, jungle, and Legos. That launch was followed by the late-2018 introduction of Jell-O Slime — part of the Jell-O Play line and available in monster and unicorn versions.
It Has Inspired Thousands of Recipes
