When was peppermint patty introduced




















After all, the candy predates the character by 22 years. Peppermint Patty, whose actual name was Patricia Reichardt, was introduced to the Peanuts strip on August 22, , while the candy was invented by Henry C. Kessler in 1 Invented may be a strong word, it was not exactly an original concept, but he did a good job with it!

Many have assumed, therefore, that Schulz named the character after the product. However, the Peppermint Pattie, which Kessler developed for the York Cone Company, was unlikely to have been known by Schulz until well after he introduced the character.

The York Peppermint Pattie did not become a nationally distributed brand until Schulz, based in California, probably would never had heard of it until then. The author himself said that he got the idea for the name from a dish of peppermint candies, almost a year before he actually used the name. Besides the fact that she behaved like a tomboy and was an excellent athlete, her home life was also revealed more-so than other characters, such as the fact that she was being raised by a single father.

She appeared in the longest series of strips that the author ever wrote, in which she entered an ice skating competition with her partner Snoopy, an ice skating pro, to find out, after much hard work, that it was a roller skating competition. My Life with Charlie Brown. Jackson: University of Mississippi, Peppermint Patty, however, was not the first female character named Patty to Appear in the Peanuts strip.

The first female character in the strip was also named Patty, whom Schulz named after his cousin Patricia Swanson. She became less prominent as the strip went on, being overshadowed by other characters, but you may remember her as a snobbish girl who, along with her best friend, Violet, was cruel to Charlie Brown.

She was also the character who constantly asked Pig Pen why he was so dirty. This Patty appeared in the very first strip, on October 2, , but was not named until October 26 of that year. Schulz and Peanuts: A Biography. New York: Harper, The Peter Paul Candy company, maker of the Mounds and Almond Joy bars, acquired the York Cone Company in and began to distribute the York Peppermint Pattie nationally three years later, expanding production and promoting the product aggressively.

Cadbury bought the company in and in sold the Mounds, Almond Joy, and York Peppermint Patties the Peter Paul products brands to the Hershey Company, which still makes them all today. When the original cone company was founded in the early twentieth century, ice cream cones were a relatively new thing in the United States. In Europe, ice cream cones have been around much longer. They date back to the eighteenth century. But, it was popularized at the St. Before York Peppermint Patties were invented, peppermint covered with chocolate was not very popular.

The quality was less than ideal and the peppermint was always mushy and soft. However, Kessler was able to figure out how to prevent the peppermint center from becoming gooey.

His peppermint was always firm and crisp. In fact, each pattie would be tested and if they did not split evenly in the center when broken in half, the batch was not sent out to be sold to consumers. I always felt that the peppermint was too strong and it always hurt my mouth. I would have much rather have been eating a Milky Way!

Every Halloween, after Trick or Treating, I would go through my huge bag of candy, taking out the Peppermint Patties and giving them all to my mother. As I have gotten older, Peppermint Patties have grown on me. Although they are not my first choice of candy, I think they taste pretty darn good.



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