Let's not panic. We all know that Twinkies, Ding Dongs, Wonder bread and the rest of Hostess Brands' oddly everlasting foods aren't going away any time soon, even if the food culture that created them is gasping its last.
Yes,
Hostess is shutting down. And odds seem to favor the roughly
century-old company disappearing from our corporate landscape. But
before you rush out to stockpile a strategic Twinkie reserve, consider a
few things. Namely, that Twinkies never die. You know full well that
the snack cakes down at your corner 7-Eleven are going to outlive us all. Probably even after they've been consumed.
And
then there's the acquisition-happy nature of the business world, an
environment that increasingly prizes intellectual property above all.
It's hard to imagine the fading away of brands as storied and valuable
as Ho Hos, Ring Dings and Yodels. Within hours of announcing the closure
Friday, the company already had put out word that Zingers, Fruit Pies
and all the other brands were up for grabs.
Even if production
really did stop, how long do you think it would take for some
enterprising investor intoxicated by a cocktail of nostalgia and irony
for the treats Mom used to pack in his G.I. Joe lunch box to find a way
to roll out commemorative Twinkies? Special edition holiday Ho Hos? It's
just the nature of our product-centered world. Brands don't die, even
when perhaps they should.
But let's pretend for a moment they did. What would we lose if Twinkies fell off the culinary cliff?
Certainly
few obesity-minded nutritionists would bemoan the loss. With some 500
million Twinkies produced a year, each packing 150 calories... Well,
let's just leave it by saying that shaving 75 billion calories from the
American diet sure could add up to a whole lot of skinny jeans.
Except that Twinkies aren't merely a snack cake, nor just junk food.
They are iconic in ways that transcend how Americans typically
fetishize food. But ultimately, they fell victim to the very fervor that
created them.
Despite the many urban legends about the
indestructability of Twinkies — Did you know they are made with the same
chemical used in embalming? Or that they last 5, no 15, no 50 years? —
and the many sadly true stories about the atrocious ingredients used to
create them today, these treats once upon a time were the real deal.
They
started out back in 1930, an era when people actually paid attention to
seasonality in foods. James A. Dewar, who worked at Hostess predecessor
Continental Baking Company in Schiller, Ill., wanted to find a way to
use the bakery's shortbread pans year round. You see, the shortbread was
filled with strawberries, but strawberries were only available for a
few weeks a year.
So he used the oblong pans to bake spongecakes, which he then filled with banana cream. Bananas were a more regular crop.
Let's
pause so you can wrap your mind around that for a moment. Twinkies once
contained real fruit. Twinkies were created because of seasonality.
All
went swimmingly until World War II hit and rationing meant — say it
with me — Yes! We have no bananas. And so was born the vanilla cream
Twinkie, which was vastly more popular anyway. Even then, there was a
crafted element to these treats. The filling was added by hand using a
foot pedal-powered pump. Pump too hard and the Twinkies exploded. These
days you only see that when teenagers post YouTube videos of themselves
microwaving them.
It was around this time that American food
culture did an about face. It was an era when the industrialization and
processing of cheap food wasn't just desired, it was glorified. Cans and
chemicals could set you free. And they certainly set Twinkies free of
the nuisance of a short shelf life. It's not formaldehyde that keeps
these snack cakes feeling fresh, it's the lack of any dairy products in
the so-called "cream."
"Something about it just absolutely grabbed
the popular culture imagination," says Marion Nestle, a New York
University professor of nutrition and food studies — and no fan of junk
food. "It's the prototypical indestructible junk food. It was the sort
of height to which American technological ingenuity could go to create a
product that was almost entirely artificial, but gave the appearance of
eclairs."
When Twinkies signed on as a sponsor of the "Howdy
Doody" show during the 1950s, their cultural legacy was sealed. Taglines
such as "The snacks with a snack in the middle" began etching
themselves into generations of young minds and it was considered
perfectly fine that Twinkie the Kid would lasso and drag children before
stuffing his sugar bombs in their faces.
It was the snack cake
heyday. Twinkies were being deep-fried at state fairs, doing cameos in
movies like "Ghost Busters" and "Die Hard" and being pushed by
Spider-Man in comic books. A pre-vegan President Bill Clinton even
signed off on including Twinkies in the nation's millennium time capsule
(the two-pack was later removed and consumed by his council overseeing
such matters for fear mice would add themselves to the time capsule).
Sure,
not all the attention was positive. Somewhere along the line, Twinkies
became the butt of jokes, mostly about their perceived longevity (though
Hostess staunchly maintains 25 days is the max). And not all
associations were great. The so-called "Twinkie defense" came out of the
1979 murder trial of Dan White, whose lawyers included his junk food
obsession among the evidence of his supposed altered state of mind.
Then
something happened. Suddenly, Americans who for decades had been tone
deaf to how food was produced suddenly started paying attention, seeking
out organic goat cheeses made from the milk of an unoppressed herd
raised on a fence-free collective within a 20-mile radius of home. Even
Doritos went artisanal, and an awareness of seasons and availability
crept back into the culinary consciousness.
Suddenly products that
had so prospered by their artificiality lost their allure. Even
Hostess, which blamed this week's shutdown mostly on a labor dispute
that hobbled its facilities, has acknowledged that consumer concern
about health and food quality changed the game. People just weren't
buying snack cakes like they used to.
So what would we lose if
Twinkies really did go away? From a culinary standpoint and from a
nutritional standpoint, it's hard to love the Twinkie (or pretty much
any Hostess product). It's hard not to wonder how the American diet, the
American palate, would be different if the parents of the '50s hadn't
begun a cycle of turning to processed packages as the de facto snack of
childhood.
And does nostalgia alone justify the continuation of something so patently bad for us?
Of course nostalgia, even irony, taste awfully good.
And
I notice that a growing number of — dare I say it — artisanal bakeries
are going retro, creating their own inspired takes on classic processed snack cakes. Treats like red velvet "twinkies" made with real ingredients. So perhaps it isn't time for Twinkies to go away. Or to stay the same. Maybe it's time for them to go back to their roots. And then, we lose nothing.
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