Thursday, December 10, 2009

Candy Cane? Who came up with that?!

Recently when we decorated our Christmas tree my nine year old son began to complain that we didn't have any candy canes. Apparently you cannot have Christmas without candy canes. :) So, what do you think I do, I load in my car at the first opportunity and drive my happy self to the store to get some. You know, when I was a kid (many years ago) I can only remember ever having red and white candy canes that tasted like peppermint. Now a days there is such a variety that you could have a candy cane for each day in December and still not taste them all. Made me wonder who came up with the idea of the candy cane in the first place. So, with a little bit of typing through Google, here is an article that I found. Enjoy the holiday season and don't forget your Candy Canes!

The symbol of the shepherds’ crook is an ancient one, representing the humble shepherds who were the first to worship the newborn Christ. Its counterpart is our candy cane – so old as a symbol that we have nearly forgotten its humble origin.

Legend has it that in 1670, the choirmaster at the Cologne Cathedral handed out sugar sticks among his young singers to keep them quiet during the long Living Creche ceremony. In honor of the occasion, he had the candies bent into shepherds’ crooks. In 1847, a German-Swedish immigrant named August Imgard of Wooster, Ohio, decorated a small blue spruce with paper ornaments and candy canes.

It wasn’t until the turn of the century that the red and white stripes and peppermint flavors became the norm. The body of the cane is white, representing the life that is pure. The broad red stripe is symbolic of the Lord’s sacrifice for man.
In the 1920s, Bob McCormack began making candy canes as special Christmas treats for his children, friends and local shopkeepers in Albany, Georgia. It was a laborious process – pulling, twisting, cutting and bending the candy by hand. It could only be done on a local scale.

In the 1950s, Bob’s brother-in-law, Gregory Keller, a Catholic priest, invented a machine to automate candy cane production. Packaging innovations by the younger McCormacks made it possible to transport the delicate canes on a scale that transformed Bobs Candies, Inc. into the largest producer of candy canes in the world.

Although modern technology has made candy canes accessible and plentiful, they’ve not lost their purity and simplicity as a traditional holiday food and symbol of the humble roots of Christianity.
(copied from www.ideafinder.com)

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