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Wikipedia

Jell-O

Jell-O is an American brand offering a variety of powdered gelatin dessert (fruit-flavored gels/jellies), pudding, and no-bake cream pie mixes. The original gelatin dessert (genericized as jello) is the signature of the brand. "Jell-O" is a registered trademark of Kraft Heinz, and is based in Chicago, Illinois.

Jell-O
Product typeGelatin dessert, pudding
OwnerKraft Heinz
Produced byKraft Foods
CountryUnited States
Introduced1897; 126 years ago (1897)
Websitemyfoodandfamily.com/kraft-jello
Jell-O
TypeGelatin desserts, puddings
Created byPearle Bixby Wait
Main ingredientsPowdered gelatin, sugar or artificial sweetener, artificial flavors, food coloring
VariationsMany flavors and various snacks
Food energy
(per 21g - 23gr serving)
80 kcal (335 kJ)
Nutritional value
(per 21g - 23gr serving)
  •   Media: Jell-O

The dessert was especially popular in the first half of the 20th century, remaining popular in certain demographics. The original gelatin dessert began in Le Roy, New York, in 1897, when Pearle Bixby Wait trademarked the name Jell-O. He and his wife May had made the product by adding strawberry, raspberry, orange, and lemon flavoring to sugar and granulated gelatin (which had been patented in 1845). When water is added and the mixture is allowed to sit in the fridge for a few hours, it solidifies.

Description

Jell-O is sold prepared (ready-to-eat), or in powder form, and is available in various colors and flavors. The powder contains powdered gelatin and flavorings, including sugar or artificial sweeteners. It is dissolved in hot water, then chilled and allowed to set. Fruit, vegetables, and whipped cream can be added to make elaborate snacks that can be molded into shapes.

Some non-gelatin pudding and pie-filling products are sold under the Jell-O brand. Ordinary Jell-O pudding is cooked on the stove top (with milk) then eaten warm or chilled, whereas Jell-O instant pudding is mixed with cold milk and chilled; it sets up without cooking. To make pie fillings, the same pudding products are prepared with less liquid.

History

Early history

 
 
(Left): Pearl Bixby Wait, creator of the "Jell-O" brand; (right): Jell-O advertisement by the Genesee Pure Food Company, c. 1910

Gelatin, a protein produced from collagen extracted from boiled bones, connective tissues, and other animal products, has been a component of food, particularly desserts, since the 15th century.[1]

Gelatin was popularized in New York in the Victorian era with spectacular and complex jelly molds. Gelatin was sold in sheets and had to be purified, which was time-consuming. Gelatin desserts were the province of royalty and the relatively well-to-do. In 1845, a patent for powdered gelatin was obtained by industrialist Peter Cooper, who built the first American steam-powered locomotive, the Tom Thumb.[2][3] This powdered gelatin was easy to manufacture and easier to use in cooking.

In 1897, in LeRoy, New York, carpenter and cough syrup manufacturer Pearle Bixby Wait trademarked a gelatin dessert called "Jell-O". Wait and his wife, May, added strawberry, raspberry, orange, and lemon flavoring to granulated gelatin and sugar.[4] In 1899, Wait sold Jell-O to "Orator Francis Woodward", whose Genesee Pure Food Company produced the successful Grain-O health drink. Part of the legal agreement between Woodward and Wait dealt with the similar Jell-O name.[5][6]

 
1904 advertisement

Going mainstream

Various elements were key to Jell-O becoming a mainstream product: new technologies, such as refrigeration, powdered gelatin and machine packaging, home economics classes, and the company's marketing.[7]

Initially, Woodward struggled to sell the powdered product. Beginning in 1902, to raise awareness, Woodward's Genesee Pure Food Company placed advertisements in the Ladies' Home Journal proclaiming Jell-O to be "America's Most Famous Dessert."[8] Jell-O was a minor success until 1904, when Genesee Pure Food Company sent armies of salesmen into the field to distribute free Jell-O cookbooks, a pioneering marketing tactic.[9]

 
"America's Most Famous Dessert", 1910s advertisement

Within a decade, Genesee Pure Food Company added three new flavors, chocolate (discontinued in 1927), cherry, and peach, and it launched the brand in Canada.[8] Celebrity testimonials and recipes appeared in advertisements featuring actress Ethel Barrymore and opera singer Ernestine Schumann-Heink. Some Jell-O illustrated advertisements were painted by Maxfield Parrish.

In 1923, the newly rechristened Jell-O Company launched "D-Zerta", an artificially sweetened version of Jell-O. Two years later, Postum and Genesee merged, and in 1927 Postum acquired Clarence Birdseye's frozen foods company to form the General Foods Corporation.

 
Quick, Easy Jell-O Wonder Dishes, Jell-O Cookbook of 1930

By 1930, there appeared a vogue in American cuisine for congealed salads, and the company introduced lime-flavored Jell-O, to complement the add-ins that cooks across the country were combining in these aspics and salads. Popular Jell-O recipes often included ingredients like cabbage, celery, green peppers, and even cooked pasta.[8]

In 1934, sponsorship from Jell-O made comedian Jack Benny the dessert's spokesperson.[10] At this time Post introduced a jingle ("featured" by the agency Young & Rubicam[11]) that was familiar over several decades, in which the spelling "J-E-L-L-O" was (or could be) sung over a rising five-note musical theme.

The jingle was written by Don Bestor, who, at the time, was the bandleader on Jack Benny's radio show, "The Jell-O Program Starring Jack Benny."[12]

In 1936, chocolate returned to the Jell-O lineup, as an instant pudding made with milk. It proved enormously popular, and over time other pudding flavors were added such as vanilla, tapioca, coconut, pistachio, butterscotch, egg custard, flan, and rice pudding.

By the 1950s, salads became so popular that Jell-O responded with savory and vegetable flavors such as celery, Italian, mixed vegetable, and seasoned tomato. These flavors have since been discontinued.[8]

Baby boom

External video
 
  Kitchen Chemistry: Jell-O, Tracing Jell-O’s rise to fame, Science History Institute

Though much of the elaborate and dainty tea time fare served between the 1920s and 1950s was luxurious and decorative, using fancy ingredients like caviar or lobster, Jell-O became an affordable ornamental ingredient that women were able to use to create feminine, light, delicate dishes that were the standard of refined tea time fare during that period. By the Jazz Age nearly 1/3 of salad recipes in an average cookbook were gelatin-based recipes including varied fillings of fruit, vegetables or even cream cheese.

Typical recipes from the early 20th century included exotic fruits like figs, dates and bananas, or lemon flavored jello paired with maraschino cherries and other ingredients like marshmallows and almonds.[13] One sweet gelatin-based fruit dessert called only "Good Salad" includes vanilla pudding, tapioca pudding, pineapple, mandarin oranges and orange gelatin. The pudding mixes are made with the reserved juice from the canned fruit and the flavored gelatin, the fruits are added and the dessert salad is allowed to set in the fridge and served cool.[14]

One savory recipe collected by the Des Moines Register, published in Iowa, is for a tomato soup gelatin salad. The salad, served chilled, is made from lemon gelatin, tomato soup, cream cheese, stuffed olives combined with various other ingredients and seasonings.[14]

The baby boom saw a significant increase in sales for Jell-O. Young mothers didn't have the supporting community structures of earlier generations, so marketers were quick to promote easy-to-prepare prepackaged foods. By this time, creating a Jell-O dessert required simply boiling water, combining the water with Jell-O, and putting the mixture into Tupperware molds and refrigerating it for a short time.[7]

New flavors were continually added and unsuccessful flavors were removed: in the 1950s and 1960s, apple, black cherry, black raspberry, grape, lemon-lime, mixed fruit, orange-banana, pineapple-grapefruit, blackberry, strawberry-banana, tropical fruit, and more intense "wild" versions of the venerable strawberry, raspberry, and cherry. In 1966, the Jell-O "No-Bake" dessert line was launched, which allowed a cheesecake to be made in 15 minutes. In 1969, Jell-O 1∗2∗3 (later Jell-O 1•2•3), a gelatin dessert that separated into three layers as it cooled, was unveiled. Until 1987, Jell-O 1•2•3 was readily found in grocery stores throughout most of the United States, but the dessert is now rare. In 1971 packaged prepared pudding called Jell-O Pudding Treats were introduced. Jell-O Whip 'n Chill, a mousse-style dessert, was introduced and widely promoted; it remains available in limited areas today. A similar dessert called Jell-O Soft Swirl was introduced in 1972, flavors included Chocolate Creme, Strawberry Creme, Vanilla Creme, and Peach Creme. Florence Henderson appeared in TV ads for this product.

Sales decline and turnaround

 
Lime Jell-O

In 1964, the slogan "There's always room for Jell-O" was introduced, promoting the product as a "light dessert" that could easily be consumed even after a heavy meal.

Throughout the 1960s through the 1980s, Jell-O's sales steadily decreased. Many Jell-O dishes, such as desserts and Jell-O salads, became special occasion foods rather than everyday items. Marketers blamed this decline on decreasing family sizes, a "fast-paced" lifestyle and women's increasing employment. By 1986, a market study concluded that mothers with young children rarely purchased Jell-O.[7]

To turn things around, Jell-O hired Dana Gioia to stop the decline. The marketing team revisited the Jell-O recipes published in past cookbooks and rediscovered Jigglers, although the original recipe did not use that name. Jigglers are Jell-O snacks molded into fun shapes and eaten as finger food. Jell-O launched a massive marketing campaign, notably featuring Bill Cosby as spokesman. The campaign was a huge success, causing a significant market gain.[7]

Cosby became the brand's spokesperson in 1974, and continued as the voice of Jell-O for almost thirty years.[15] Over his tenure as the mouthpiece for the company, he helped introduce new products such as frozen Jell-O Pops (in gelatin and pudding varieties); the new Sugar-Free Jell-O, which replaced D-Zerta in 1984 and was sweetened with NutraSweet; Jell-O Jigglers concentrated gummi snacks; and Sparkling Jell-O, a carbonated version of the dessert touted as the "Champagne of Jell-O." In 2010, Cosby returned as Jell-O spokesperson in an on-line web series called OBKB.[16]

In the 1980s, a Jell-O advertising campaign slogan reminded consumers, "Don't forget—you have to remember to make it."

In 1990, General Foods was merged into Kraft Foods Inc. by parent company Philip Morris (now the Altria Group). New flavors were introduced: watermelon, blueberry, cranberry, margarita, and piña colada, among others. In 2001, the state Senate of Utah recognized Jell-O as a favorite snack food of Utah, recognizing the fundamental basis of Jell-O in Mormon cuisine such as Jell-O salad, and Governor Michael O. Leavitt declared an annual "Jell-O Week."[17] During the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, the souvenir pins included one depicting green Jell-O.[18]

In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Jell-O's family-friendly reputation was slightly tarnished by Jell-O shots and Jell-O wrestling.[7]

 
The original Jell-O Factory in Le Roy, New York, pictured in 2014

As of 2011, there were over 420 million boxes of Jell-O gelatin and over 1 billion Jell-O cups sold in the United States each year.[19] As of 2016, there were more than 110 products sold under the Jell-O brand name.[20]

Jell-O is used as a substantial ingredient in a well-known dessert, a "Jell-O mold" the preparation of which requires a mold designed to hold gelatin, and the depositing of small quantities of chopped fruit, nuts, and other ingredients before it hardens to its typical form. Fresh pineapple, papaya, kiwifruit, and ginger root cannot be used because they contain enzymes that prevent gelatin from "setting". In the case of pineapple juice and the enzyme bromelain that it contains though, the enzyme can be inactivated without denaturing through excessive heating and thus altering the flavor by the addition of a small measured amount of capsaicin sourced from hot chilies.[21]

Jell-O shots

 
Tray of jello shots

An alternative recipe calls for the addition of an alcoholic beverage to the mix, contributing approximately one third to one half of the liquid added after the gelatin has dissolved in a boil.[22] A serving of the resulting mixture is called a "Jell-O shot", or the genericized "Jello shot", at parties. The quantity and timing of the addition of the liquor are vital aspects; it is not possible to make Jell-O shots with liquor alone, as the colloidal proteins in dry gelatin consist of chains which require a hot liquid to denature them before they can then reform as a semisolid colloidal suspension. Pure alcohol cannot be heated sufficiently to break down these proteins, as it evaporates.[23]

Vodka or rum is commonly used in Jell-O shots, but the shots can be made with almost any liquor or blends of multiple liquors. It is important to adjust the proportions of alcohol and cold water to ensure that the mixture sets when experimenting with various liquors. The Jell-O shots can be served in shot glasses and/or small paper or plastic cups; the paper or plastic cups are easier to eat from, but shot glasses are more attractive. The alcohol in Jell-O shots is contained within the Jell-O, so the body absorbs it more slowly, causing people to underestimate how much alcohol they have consumed. Drinkers must monitor their intake because of this.[24]

American singer-songwriter Tom Lehrer claims to have invented the Jell-O shot in the 1950s to circumvent restrictions on alcoholic beverages at the army base where he was stationed.[25] An early published recipe for an alcoholic gelatin drink dates from 1862, found in How to Mix Drinks, or The Bon Vivant's Companion by Jerry Thomas: his recipe for "Punch Jelly" calls for the addition of isinglass or other gelatin to a punch made from cognac, rum, and lemon juice.[26][27] Thomas warns that strength of the punch is "artfully concealed" by the gelatin.[26]

Manufacturing and tourism

 
Jell-O Museum in LeRoy, New York

As of 2012, LeRoy, New York, is known as the home of Jell-O and has the only Jell-O Museum in the world, located on the main road through the small town. Jell-O was manufactured here until General Foods closed the plant in 1964 and relocated manufacturing to Dover, Delaware.[3] The Jell-O Gallery museum is operated by the Le Roy Historical Society at the Le Roy House and Union Free School, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1997.[28]

At the museum, visitors can learn about the history of the dessert from its inception. Visitors starting on East Main Street, follow Jell-O Brick Road, whose stones are inscribed with the names of former factory employees. The museum offers looks at starting materials for Jell-O, such as sturgeon bladder and calves' hooves, and various molds.

The Jell-O plant in Mason City, Iowa, produces America's supply of ready-to-eat Jell-O gelatin dessert and pudding cups.

Advertising

 
 
 
(Left) 1920 Jell-O recipe pamphlet featuring the "Jell-O Girl"; (center): 1948 ad published in The Ladies' Home Journal; (right): a Jell-O thermometer

Jell-O's early advertising campaign, initially directed by William E. Humelbaugh and later Frank LaBounty, first appeared in the Ladies' Home Journal in 1904. The print ads were often accompanied by recipes and color illustrations and became very popular. Artists such as Rose O'Neill, Maxfield Parrish, Coles Phillips, Norman Rockwell, Linn Ball, and Angus MacDonall contributed to the campaign. Franklin King, working for ad agency Dauchy Company, depicted his daughter Elizabeth in many of the illustrations, making her the recognizable "Jell-O Girl".[10]

Jack Benny's top-rated radio program began its Jell-O sponsorship in 1934.[10] The show did not break for commercials; instead, announcer Don Wilson incorporated speeches about Jell-O into the program at appropriate places, to Jack's feigned comic annoyance. The first show originated the five-note "J-E-L-L-O!" jingle retained in Jell-O's later advertising.. Lucille Ball's My Favorite Husband, the radio predecessor to TV's I Love Lucy, was another popular program sponsored by Jell-O for much of its 124-episode run, beginning January 7, 1949. Ball's character Liz Cooper often opened the program with the lively greeting, "Jell-O, everybody!"

Comedian Bill Cosby is associated with Jell-O and, more famously, Jell-O pudding, and he appeared in many commercials promoting both. Later shows like Mad TV, The Simpsons and Saturday Night Live parody Cosby, using Jell-O references like "pudding pop". In the 1960s, the cast of the sitcom Hogan's Heroes did a commercial with Carol Channing featuring Colonel Hogan, his men, Kommandant Klink and Sergeant Shultz having Jell-O and Dream Whip for dessert. Also, in the first few seasons of the first of Lucille Ball's two 1960s television series, The Lucy Show, cast members including Vivian Vance often did commercials for Jell-O.

In 1995, Jell-O carried the tagline "It's alive!" and had the phrase "J-E-L-L-OOOOOOO!".

In August 2018, Jell-O released an animated series on YouTube and Amazon Prime Video titled "JELL-O Wobz" in partnership with DreamWorksTV.[29]

Religious considerations

The consumption of gelatin from particular animals may be forbidden by religious rules or cultural taboos.

Islamic halal and Jewish kosher customs generally require gelatin from sources other than pigs, such as cattle that have been slaughtered according to religious regulations (halal or kosher), or fish (that Jews and Muslims are allowed to consume).[30]

On the other hand, some Islamic jurists have argued that the chemical treatment "purifies" the gelatin enough to always be halal, an argument most common in the field of medicine.[30]

It has similarly been argued that gelatin in medicine is permissible in Judaism, as it is not used as food.[31] According to The Jewish Dietary Laws, the book of kosher guidelines published by the Rabbinical Assembly, the organization of Conservative Jewish rabbis, all gelatin is kosher and pareve because the chemical transformation undergone in the manufacturing process renders it a different physical and chemical substance.[32]

Sikh, Hindu, and Jain customs may require gelatin alternatives from sources other than animals, as many Hindus, most Jains and some Sikhs are vegetarian.[33]


In culture

 
Premade Jell-O snack pack

Jell-O is mentioned in the 1936 popular song "A Fine Romance" by Dorothy Fields (with music by Jerome Kern), where it is humorously referred to as a mundane alternative to the excitement of romantic love.[34] In 1980, the American composer William Bolcom wrote a popular humorous song about Jell-O, "Lime Jello Marshmallow Cottage Cheese Surprise", satirising its use in combined sweet and savory dishes such as Jello salad.[35][36]

In 1992, Ivette Bassa won the second ever Ig Nobel Prize in chemistry for inventing blue Jell-O.[37][38]

The rock group Green Jellÿ was originally named Green Jellö, but had to change their name due to a lawsuit by Kraft Foods which claimed that the band was infringing the trademark for Jell-O.[39]

Mormonism

Jell-O is especially popular among Mormons, so much so that the Mormon Corridor region is nicknamed the Jell-O Belt.[40][41][42][43][44] Jell-O was recognized in 2001 as "a favorite snack food of Utah" by the Utah Senate,[45] observing that Utah had had the highest per-capita consumption of Jell-O for many years, and how citizens of Utah had rallied to "Take Back the Title" after Des Moines, Iowa, exceeded Utah in Jell-O consumption in 1999.[46] The culture of Utah, petitions by Utahns, and campaigning by students of Brigham Young University were also mentioned as reasons for recognizing Jell-O.[46] Bill Cosby, longtime spokesperson for the Jell-O brand, appeared before the Utah Legislature in support of the resolution. "He told the assembly that he believes the reason people in Utah love Jell-O is that the snack is perfect for families – and the people of Utah are all about family."[47]

The 2002 Mormon cinema romantic comedy The Singles Ward, which is filled with inside Mormon jokes and stereotypes, has a scene where someone slips and falls in Jell-O at a church social for young, single Mormons.

The stereotype of Mormons loving Jell-O does not have a long history. Media reports in 1969 and 1988 on foods popular among Mormons or in Utah make no mention of Jell-O, and a 1988 article mentions Jell-O as a Lutheran tradition. In the late 1980s, Jell-O had a marketing campaign promoting the snack and its Jigglers recipe as fun for children and easy for parents, which played well among family-oriented Mormons.[48] In 1997, Kraft released sales figures revealing Salt Lake City to have the highest per-capita Jell-O consumption.[7]

Current flavors

The following are the flavors of Jell-O products that are currently being produced:[49]

Gelatin

Pudding


^a Also available in a sugar free/low calorie product.
^b Available seasonally.
^c Only available as a prepared product.

Discontinued flavors

See also

References

  1. ^ Purdom, Candace (10 April 2001). "Program on History of Gelatin Breaks the Mold: Shedding Light on Familiar Dessert". Chicago Tribune. from the original on 21 October 2013. Retrieved 20 June 2013.
  2. ^ "US4084A - Improvement in the preparation of portable gelatine". Google Patent Search. 20 June 1845. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  3. ^ a b Belson, Ken (May 4, 2008). "Upstate, Where It Was First Made, Unwavering Devotion to Jell-O". The New York Times. from the original on October 21, 2013. Retrieved July 15, 2012.
  4. ^ . The Jell-O Gallery. Le Roy Historical Society. 27 October 2011. Archived from the original on 13 February 2014.
  5. ^ Wyman, Carolyn (2001). Jell-O: A Biography — The History and Mystery of America's Most Famous Dessert. Mariner Books. pp. 4–5. ISBN 978-0156011235.
  6. ^ "History". from the original on 2018-08-05. Retrieved 2019-03-26.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Christy Spackman (August 17, 2012). "Mormonism's Jell-O Mold". Slate.com. from the original on August 17, 2012. Retrieved August 17, 2012.
  8. ^ a b c d . Chemical Heritage Foundation. Archived from the original on March 13, 2016.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 February 2008. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
  10. ^ a b c "A timeline set in Jell-O". Deseret News (Salt Lake City). June 28, 2006. from the original on August 5, 2013. Retrieved July 15, 2012.
  11. ^ "Business – Jell-O pulls plug on longtime ad firm 09/10/00". from the original on 2008-10-25. Retrieved 2009-10-14.
  12. ^ "Jello Again". Variety. 11 December 1940. p. 35. from the original on 19 November 2015. Retrieved 18 November 2015.
  13. ^ Sherrie A. Inness, Dinner Roles: American Women and Culinary Culture, p. 62-66
  14. ^ a b The Des Moines Register Cookbook, 1995
  15. ^ Cross, Mary (2002). A Century of American Icons: 100 Products and Slogans from the 20th-Century Consumer Culture. Greenwood Press. pp. 165–167. ISBN 978-0313314810. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  16. ^ Frederix, Emily (May 16, 2010). . Huffington Post. Archived from the original on May 20, 2010.
  17. ^ Kay, Katty (6 February 2001). "Utah loves Jell-O". BBC News. Washington. from the original on 15 July 2015. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
  18. ^ Phillips, Valerie (February 6, 2002). "There's green Jell-O on your lapel... Abundance of food pins are unique to Salt Lake Olympics". Deseret News. from the original on April 28, 2016. Retrieved April 21, 2016.
  19. ^ "Wiggle Room". Sunday Morning. CBS. 27 November 2011. from the original on 22 October 2016. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
  20. ^ Jell-O Products 2016-08-07 at the Wayback Machine. Kraft. Retrieved 4 August 2016.
  21. ^ Pineapple Jelly.MPG. YouTube. 23 March 2010. from the original on 18 July 2015. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
  22. ^ Sampson, Susan (September 9, 2006). "Jell-O shots pack a bang". The Toronto Star. Toronto, Ontario, Canada. p. M.4. Retrieved August 3, 2010. A Jell-O shot is a cocktail you can eat.
  23. ^ My Science Project – What is the Ultimate Jell-O Shot? 2013-10-30 at the Wayback Machine.
  24. ^ The Art & Science of the Jello Shot 2012-03-03 at the Wayback Machine DrinkStreet.com
  25. ^ "That Was the Wit That Was". SF Weekly. April 19, 2000. from the original on May 12, 2013. Retrieved October 1, 2012.
  26. ^ a b Thomas, Jerry. How to Mix Drinks, Or, The Bon-vivant's Companion. Dick & Fitzgerald. p. 24. Retrieved 2016-03-13.
  27. ^ The Joy of Mixology by Gary Regan. Clarkson Potter, 2003. Pages 15-16, 150.
  28. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. 2009-03-13. from the original on 2011-01-22. Retrieved 2011-01-17.
  29. ^ "Jell-O teams with DreamworksTV on animated series for YouTube, Amazon Prime Video". Marketing Dive. from the original on 2018-08-06. Retrieved 2018-08-06.
  30. ^ a b Gezairy HA (2001-07-17). "(Form letter EDB.7/3 P6/61/3)" (PDF). World Health Organization, Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean. Retrieved 2009-05-12.
  31. ^ Smith, MJ (November 2015). "Promoting Vaccine Confidence". Infectious Disease Clinics of North America (Review). 29 (4): 759–69. doi:10.1016/j.idc.2015.07.004. PMID 26337737.
  32. ^ Samuel H. Dresner; Seymour Siegel; David M. Pollock (1982). The Jewish Dietary Laws. The Rabbinical Assembly. p. 97-98. ISBN 978-0-8381-2105-4.
  33. ^ Schmidt, Arno; Fieldhouse, Paul (2007). The World Religions Cookbook. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 99. ISBN 978-0-313-33504-4.
  34. ^ Furia, Philip; Patterson, Laurie (2010). The Songs of Hollywood. Oxford University Press. p. 98. ISBN 9780199792665. Retrieved 16 February 2018. A Fine Romance song jello.
  35. ^ Bolcom, William; Morris, Joan (1980). "Lime jello marshmallow cottage cheese surprise". Melville, N.Y. : E.B. Marks Music Corp. from the original on 17 February 2018. Retrieved 16 February 2018.
  36. ^ Forstie, Clare (2012). "From Rosy to Regrettable: Mixed Nostalgia and the Meanings of Jell-O Salad". Digest: A Journal of Foodways and Culture. American Folklore Society. from the original on 16 February 2018. Retrieved 16 February 2018.
  37. ^ Eric Richard (1992-10-06). "Second Ig Nobel Ceremony Held". The Tech. from the original on 2011-12-24. Retrieved 2009-10-14.
  38. ^ Jonathan N. Axelrod (1995-09-25). "Ig Nobel Tickets Go on Sale:Awards Ceremony Set to Honor Unusual Achievements". Harvard Crimson.
  39. ^ Herbert, Geoff (February 14, 2020). "'World's worst band' Green Jellÿ to perform St. Patrick's Day concert in Syracuse". Syracuse.com. Retrieved 2021-01-19.
  40. ^ Chandler, Michael Alison (26 January 2006). "Big-Screen Religion". The Washington Post. from the original on 22 October 2016. Retrieved 12 December 2017. [...] the Jell-O Belt (the self-referential term for Utah and Idaho, home to large Mormon families that consider the colorful gelatin a staple food for dinner and church socials)[.]
  41. ^ Crump, Steve (21 March 2004). "Don't ask me. Getting jiggly outside the Jell-O Belt". The Twin Falls Idaho Times-News. p. B01.
  42. ^ Snider, Eric D. (17 August 2003). "Locally produced film headed to 6 festivals". Provo Daily Herald. 'A film that was locally produced will find an audience beyond the Jell-O Belt [...]'
  43. ^ Mikita, Carole (17 November 2003). "Mormon Moviemakers: The Sequel". KSL-TV. Reprinted at ldsfilm.com entry 2012-02-18 at the Wayback Machine for Saints and Soldiers.
  44. ^ Editorial board (1 February 2001). "Does Jell-O belong at Legislature". Provo Daily Herald. from the original on 27 March 2016. Retrieved 17 August 2012.
  45. ^ . Utah State Legislature. 2001. Archived from the original on Feb 4, 2017. Retrieved Oct 27, 2014.
  46. ^ a b "Utah Legislature SR0005". from the original on 20 September 2015. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
  47. ^ Merritt, Brett (16 October 2003). "The pudding Papa: Jell-O pitchman Bill Cosby jiggles onto the stage at Abravanel Hall". Provo Daily Herald.
  48. ^ Spackman, Christy (2012-08-17). "Why Do We Associate Jell-O With Utah and Mormonism?". Slate Magazine. Retrieved 2022-05-05.
  49. ^ "JELL-O". Recipes. from the original on 9 February 2013. Retrieved 12 August 2015.

External links

  • Official website  
  • Jell-O Gallery Museum
  • How to Make Jello

jell, this, article, about, brand, dessert, products, gelatin, desserts, general, gelatin, dessert, other, uses, jello, disambiguation, american, brand, offering, variety, powdered, gelatin, dessert, fruit, flavored, gels, jellies, pudding, bake, cream, mixes,. This article is about the brand of dessert products For gelatin desserts in general see gelatin dessert For other uses see Jello disambiguation Jell O is an American brand offering a variety of powdered gelatin dessert fruit flavored gels jellies pudding and no bake cream pie mixes The original gelatin dessert genericized as jello is the signature of the brand Jell O is a registered trademark of Kraft Heinz and is based in Chicago Illinois Jell OProduct typeGelatin dessert puddingOwnerKraft HeinzProduced byKraft FoodsCountryUnited StatesIntroduced1897 126 years ago 1897 Websitemyfoodandfamily com kraft jelloJell OTypeGelatin desserts puddingsCreated byPearle Bixby WaitMain ingredientsPowdered gelatin sugar or artificial sweetener artificial flavors food coloringVariationsMany flavors and various snacksFood energy per 21g 23gr serving 80 kcal 335 kJ Nutritional value per 21g 23gr serving Protein2 gFat0 gCarbohydrate19 g Media Jell OThe dessert was especially popular in the first half of the 20th century remaining popular in certain demographics The original gelatin dessert began in Le Roy New York in 1897 when Pearle Bixby Wait trademarked the name Jell O He and his wife May had made the product by adding strawberry raspberry orange and lemon flavoring to sugar and granulated gelatin which had been patented in 1845 When water is added and the mixture is allowed to sit in the fridge for a few hours it solidifies Contents 1 Description 2 History 2 1 Early history 2 2 Going mainstream 2 3 Baby boom 2 4 Sales decline and turnaround 3 Jell O shots 4 Manufacturing and tourism 5 Advertising 6 Religious considerations 7 In culture 7 1 Mormonism 8 Current flavors 8 1 Gelatin 8 2 Pudding 9 Discontinued flavors 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksDescription EditJell O is sold prepared ready to eat or in powder form and is available in various colors and flavors The powder contains powdered gelatin and flavorings including sugar or artificial sweeteners It is dissolved in hot water then chilled and allowed to set Fruit vegetables and whipped cream can be added to make elaborate snacks that can be molded into shapes Some non gelatin pudding and pie filling products are sold under the Jell O brand Ordinary Jell O pudding is cooked on the stove top with milk then eaten warm or chilled whereas Jell O instant pudding is mixed with cold milk and chilled it sets up without cooking To make pie fillings the same pudding products are prepared with less liquid History EditEarly history Edit Left Pearl Bixby Wait creator of the Jell O brand right Jell O advertisement by the Genesee Pure Food Company c 1910 Gelatin a protein produced from collagen extracted from boiled bones connective tissues and other animal products has been a component of food particularly desserts since the 15th century 1 Gelatin was popularized in New York in the Victorian era with spectacular and complex jelly molds Gelatin was sold in sheets and had to be purified which was time consuming Gelatin desserts were the province of royalty and the relatively well to do In 1845 a patent for powdered gelatin was obtained by industrialist Peter Cooper who built the first American steam powered locomotive the Tom Thumb 2 3 This powdered gelatin was easy to manufacture and easier to use in cooking In 1897 in LeRoy New York carpenter and cough syrup manufacturer Pearle Bixby Wait trademarked a gelatin dessert called Jell O Wait and his wife May added strawberry raspberry orange and lemon flavoring to granulated gelatin and sugar 4 In 1899 Wait sold Jell O to Orator Francis Woodward whose Genesee Pure Food Company produced the successful Grain O health drink Part of the legal agreement between Woodward and Wait dealt with the similar Jell O name 5 6 1904 advertisement Going mainstream Edit Various elements were key to Jell O becoming a mainstream product new technologies such as refrigeration powdered gelatin and machine packaging home economics classes and the company s marketing 7 Initially Woodward struggled to sell the powdered product Beginning in 1902 to raise awareness Woodward s Genesee Pure Food Company placed advertisements in the Ladies Home Journal proclaiming Jell O to be America s Most Famous Dessert 8 Jell O was a minor success until 1904 when Genesee Pure Food Company sent armies of salesmen into the field to distribute free Jell O cookbooks a pioneering marketing tactic 9 America s Most Famous Dessert 1910s advertisement Within a decade Genesee Pure Food Company added three new flavors chocolate discontinued in 1927 cherry and peach and it launched the brand in Canada 8 Celebrity testimonials and recipes appeared in advertisements featuring actress Ethel Barrymore and opera singer Ernestine Schumann Heink Some Jell O illustrated advertisements were painted by Maxfield Parrish In 1923 the newly rechristened Jell O Company launched D Zerta an artificially sweetened version of Jell O Two years later Postum and Genesee merged and in 1927 Postum acquired Clarence Birdseye s frozen foods company to form the General Foods Corporation Quick Easy Jell O Wonder Dishes Jell O Cookbook of 1930 By 1930 there appeared a vogue in American cuisine for congealed salads and the company introduced lime flavored Jell O to complement the add ins that cooks across the country were combining in these aspics and salads Popular Jell O recipes often included ingredients like cabbage celery green peppers and even cooked pasta 8 In 1934 sponsorship from Jell O made comedian Jack Benny the dessert s spokesperson 10 At this time Post introduced a jingle featured by the agency Young amp Rubicam 11 that was familiar over several decades in which the spelling J E L L O was or could be sung over a rising five note musical theme The jingle was written by Don Bestor who at the time was the bandleader on Jack Benny s radio show The Jell O Program Starring Jack Benny 12 In 1936 chocolate returned to the Jell O lineup as an instant pudding made with milk It proved enormously popular and over time other pudding flavors were added such as vanilla tapioca coconut pistachio butterscotch egg custard flan and rice pudding By the 1950s salads became so popular that Jell O responded with savory and vegetable flavors such as celery Italian mixed vegetable and seasoned tomato These flavors have since been discontinued 8 Baby boom Edit External video Kitchen Chemistry Jell O Tracing Jell O s rise to fame Science History InstituteThough much of the elaborate and dainty tea time fare served between the 1920s and 1950s was luxurious and decorative using fancy ingredients like caviar or lobster Jell O became an affordable ornamental ingredient that women were able to use to create feminine light delicate dishes that were the standard of refined tea time fare during that period By the Jazz Age nearly 1 3 of salad recipes in an average cookbook were gelatin based recipes including varied fillings of fruit vegetables or even cream cheese Typical recipes from the early 20th century included exotic fruits like figs dates and bananas or lemon flavored jello paired with maraschino cherries and other ingredients like marshmallows and almonds 13 One sweet gelatin based fruit dessert called only Good Salad includes vanilla pudding tapioca pudding pineapple mandarin oranges and orange gelatin The pudding mixes are made with the reserved juice from the canned fruit and the flavored gelatin the fruits are added and the dessert salad is allowed to set in the fridge and served cool 14 One savory recipe collected by the Des Moines Register published in Iowa is for a tomato soup gelatin salad The salad served chilled is made from lemon gelatin tomato soup cream cheese stuffed olives combined with various other ingredients and seasonings 14 The baby boom saw a significant increase in sales for Jell O Young mothers didn t have the supporting community structures of earlier generations so marketers were quick to promote easy to prepare prepackaged foods By this time creating a Jell O dessert required simply boiling water combining the water with Jell O and putting the mixture into Tupperware molds and refrigerating it for a short time 7 New flavors were continually added and unsuccessful flavors were removed in the 1950s and 1960s apple black cherry black raspberry grape lemon lime mixed fruit orange banana pineapple grapefruit blackberry strawberry banana tropical fruit and more intense wild versions of the venerable strawberry raspberry and cherry In 1966 the Jell O No Bake dessert line was launched which allowed a cheesecake to be made in 15 minutes In 1969 Jell O 1 2 3 later Jell O 1 2 3 a gelatin dessert that separated into three layers as it cooled was unveiled Until 1987 Jell O 1 2 3 was readily found in grocery stores throughout most of the United States but the dessert is now rare In 1971 packaged prepared pudding called Jell O Pudding Treats were introduced Jell O Whip n Chill a mousse style dessert was introduced and widely promoted it remains available in limited areas today A similar dessert called Jell O Soft Swirl was introduced in 1972 flavors included Chocolate Creme Strawberry Creme Vanilla Creme and Peach Creme Florence Henderson appeared in TV ads for this product Sales decline and turnaround Edit Lime Jell O In 1964 the slogan There s always room for Jell O was introduced promoting the product as a light dessert that could easily be consumed even after a heavy meal Throughout the 1960s through the 1980s Jell O s sales steadily decreased Many Jell O dishes such as desserts and Jell O salads became special occasion foods rather than everyday items Marketers blamed this decline on decreasing family sizes a fast paced lifestyle and women s increasing employment By 1986 a market study concluded that mothers with young children rarely purchased Jell O 7 To turn things around Jell O hired Dana Gioia to stop the decline The marketing team revisited the Jell O recipes published in past cookbooks and rediscovered Jigglers although the original recipe did not use that name Jigglers are Jell O snacks molded into fun shapes and eaten as finger food Jell O launched a massive marketing campaign notably featuring Bill Cosby as spokesman The campaign was a huge success causing a significant market gain 7 Cosby became the brand s spokesperson in 1974 and continued as the voice of Jell O for almost thirty years 15 Over his tenure as the mouthpiece for the company he helped introduce new products such as frozen Jell O Pops in gelatin and pudding varieties the new Sugar Free Jell O which replaced D Zerta in 1984 and was sweetened with NutraSweet Jell O Jigglers concentrated gummi snacks and Sparkling Jell O a carbonated version of the dessert touted as the Champagne of Jell O In 2010 Cosby returned as Jell O spokesperson in an on line web series called OBKB 16 In the 1980s a Jell O advertising campaign slogan reminded consumers Don t forget you have to remember to make it In 1990 General Foods was merged into Kraft Foods Inc by parent company Philip Morris now the Altria Group New flavors were introduced watermelon blueberry cranberry margarita and pina colada among others In 2001 the state Senate of Utah recognized Jell O as a favorite snack food of Utah recognizing the fundamental basis of Jell O in Mormon cuisine such as Jell O salad and Governor Michael O Leavitt declared an annual Jell O Week 17 During the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City the souvenir pins included one depicting green Jell O 18 In the late 1980s and early 1990s Jell O s family friendly reputation was slightly tarnished by Jell O shots and Jell O wrestling 7 The original Jell O Factory in Le Roy New York pictured in 2014 As of 2011 update there were over 420 million boxes of Jell O gelatin and over 1 billion Jell O cups sold in the United States each year 19 As of 2016 update there were more than 110 products sold under the Jell O brand name 20 Jell O is used as a substantial ingredient in a well known dessert a Jell O mold the preparation of which requires a mold designed to hold gelatin and the depositing of small quantities of chopped fruit nuts and other ingredients before it hardens to its typical form Fresh pineapple papaya kiwifruit and ginger root cannot be used because they contain enzymes that prevent gelatin from setting In the case of pineapple juice and the enzyme bromelain that it contains though the enzyme can be inactivated without denaturing through excessive heating and thus altering the flavor by the addition of a small measured amount of capsaicin sourced from hot chilies 21 Jell O shots EditMain article Jello shot Tray of jello shots An alternative recipe calls for the addition of an alcoholic beverage to the mix contributing approximately one third to one half of the liquid added after the gelatin has dissolved in a boil 22 A serving of the resulting mixture is called a Jell O shot or the genericized Jello shot at parties The quantity and timing of the addition of the liquor are vital aspects it is not possible to make Jell O shots with liquor alone as the colloidal proteins in dry gelatin consist of chains which require a hot liquid to denature them before they can then reform as a semisolid colloidal suspension Pure alcohol cannot be heated sufficiently to break down these proteins as it evaporates 23 Vodka or rum is commonly used in Jell O shots but the shots can be made with almost any liquor or blends of multiple liquors It is important to adjust the proportions of alcohol and cold water to ensure that the mixture sets when experimenting with various liquors The Jell O shots can be served in shot glasses and or small paper or plastic cups the paper or plastic cups are easier to eat from but shot glasses are more attractive The alcohol in Jell O shots is contained within the Jell O so the body absorbs it more slowly causing people to underestimate how much alcohol they have consumed Drinkers must monitor their intake because of this 24 American singer songwriter Tom Lehrer claims to have invented the Jell O shot in the 1950s to circumvent restrictions on alcoholic beverages at the army base where he was stationed 25 An early published recipe for an alcoholic gelatin drink dates from 1862 found in How to Mix Drinks or The Bon Vivant s Companion by Jerry Thomas his recipe for Punch Jelly calls for the addition of isinglass or other gelatin to a punch made from cognac rum and lemon juice 26 27 Thomas warns that strength of the punch is artfully concealed by the gelatin 26 Manufacturing and tourism Edit Jell O Museum in LeRoy New York As of 2012 update LeRoy New York is known as the home of Jell O and has the only Jell O Museum in the world located on the main road through the small town Jell O was manufactured here until General Foods closed the plant in 1964 and relocated manufacturing to Dover Delaware 3 The Jell O Gallery museum is operated by the Le Roy Historical Society at the Le Roy House and Union Free School listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1997 28 At the museum visitors can learn about the history of the dessert from its inception Visitors starting on East Main Street follow Jell O Brick Road whose stones are inscribed with the names of former factory employees The museum offers looks at starting materials for Jell O such as sturgeon bladder and calves hooves and various molds The Jell O plant in Mason City Iowa produces America s supply of ready to eat Jell O gelatin dessert and pudding cups Advertising Edit Left 1920 Jell O recipe pamphlet featuring the Jell O Girl center 1948 ad published in The Ladies Home Journal right a Jell O thermometer Jell O s early advertising campaign initially directed by William E Humelbaugh and later Frank LaBounty first appeared in the Ladies Home Journal in 1904 The print ads were often accompanied by recipes and color illustrations and became very popular Artists such as Rose O Neill Maxfield Parrish Coles Phillips Norman Rockwell Linn Ball and Angus MacDonall contributed to the campaign Franklin King working for ad agency Dauchy Company depicted his daughter Elizabeth in many of the illustrations making her the recognizable Jell O Girl 10 Jack Benny s top rated radio program began its Jell O sponsorship in 1934 10 The show did not break for commercials instead announcer Don Wilson incorporated speeches about Jell O into the program at appropriate places to Jack s feigned comic annoyance The first show originated the five note J E L L O jingle retained in Jell O s later advertising Lucille Ball s My Favorite Husband the radio predecessor to TV s I Love Lucy was another popular program sponsored by Jell O for much of its 124 episode run beginning January 7 1949 Ball s character Liz Cooper often opened the program with the lively greeting Jell O everybody Comedian Bill Cosby is associated with Jell O and more famously Jell O pudding and he appeared in many commercials promoting both Later shows like Mad TV The Simpsons and Saturday Night Live parody Cosby using Jell O references like pudding pop In the 1960s the cast of the sitcom Hogan s Heroes did a commercial with Carol Channing featuring Colonel Hogan his men Kommandant Klink and Sergeant Shultz having Jell O and Dream Whip for dessert Also in the first few seasons of the first of Lucille Ball s two 1960s television series The Lucy Show cast members including Vivian Vance often did commercials for Jell O In 1995 Jell O carried the tagline It s alive and had the phrase J E L L OOOOOOO In August 2018 Jell O released an animated series on YouTube and Amazon Prime Video titled JELL O Wobz in partnership with DreamWorksTV 29 See also Bill Cosby in advertisingReligious considerations EditThe consumption of gelatin from particular animals may be forbidden by religious rules or cultural taboos Islamic halal and Jewish kosher customs generally require gelatin from sources other than pigs such as cattle that have been slaughtered according to religious regulations halal or kosher or fish that Jews and Muslims are allowed to consume 30 On the other hand some Islamic jurists have argued that the chemical treatment purifies the gelatin enough to always be halal an argument most common in the field of medicine 30 It has similarly been argued that gelatin in medicine is permissible in Judaism as it is not used as food 31 According to The Jewish Dietary Laws the book of kosher guidelines published by the Rabbinical Assembly the organization of Conservative Jewish rabbis all gelatin is kosher and pareve because the chemical transformation undergone in the manufacturing process renders it a different physical and chemical substance 32 Sikh Hindu and Jain customs may require gelatin alternatives from sources other than animals as many Hindus most Jains and some Sikhs are vegetarian 33 In culture Edit Premade Jell O snack pack Jell O is mentioned in the 1936 popular song A Fine Romance by Dorothy Fields with music by Jerome Kern where it is humorously referred to as a mundane alternative to the excitement of romantic love 34 In 1980 the American composer William Bolcom wrote a popular humorous song about Jell O Lime Jello Marshmallow Cottage Cheese Surprise satirising its use in combined sweet and savory dishes such as Jello salad 35 36 In 1992 Ivette Bassa won the second ever Ig Nobel Prize in chemistry for inventing blue Jell O 37 38 The rock group Green Jelly was originally named Green Jello but had to change their name due to a lawsuit by Kraft Foods which claimed that the band was infringing the trademark for Jell O 39 Mormonism Edit Jell O is especially popular among Mormons so much so that the Mormon Corridor region is nicknamed the Jell O Belt 40 41 42 43 44 Jell O was recognized in 2001 as a favorite snack food of Utah by the Utah Senate 45 observing that Utah had had the highest per capita consumption of Jell O for many years and how citizens of Utah had rallied to Take Back the Title after Des Moines Iowa exceeded Utah in Jell O consumption in 1999 46 The culture of Utah petitions by Utahns and campaigning by students of Brigham Young University were also mentioned as reasons for recognizing Jell O 46 Bill Cosby longtime spokesperson for the Jell O brand appeared before the Utah Legislature in support of the resolution He told the assembly that he believes the reason people in Utah love Jell O is that the snack is perfect for families and the people of Utah are all about family 47 The 2002 Mormon cinema romantic comedy The Singles Ward which is filled with inside Mormon jokes and stereotypes has a scene where someone slips and falls in Jell O at a church social for young single Mormons The stereotype of Mormons loving Jell O does not have a long history Media reports in 1969 and 1988 on foods popular among Mormons or in Utah make no mention of Jell O and a 1988 article mentions Jell O as a Lutheran tradition In the late 1980s Jell O had a marketing campaign promoting the snack and its Jigglers recipe as fun for children and easy for parents which played well among family oriented Mormons 48 In 1997 Kraft released sales figures revealing Salt Lake City to have the highest per capita Jell O consumption 7 Current flavors EditThis section is about an event or subject that may not be current but does not specify the time period Please help improve it to include this information The talk page may contain suggestions April 2017 The following are the flavors of Jell O products that are currently being produced 49 Gelatin Edit Apricot Berry Blue Black Cherrya Blueberry Pomegranate Cherrya Cherry Lemonade Cranberry Fruit Punch Grape Lemona Limea Mango Margaritab Melon Fusion Mixchief Grape Color Changing Mixchief Juice Mixchief Soda Pop Orangea Peacha Pina Coladab Pineapple Raspberrya Strawberrya Strawberry Daiquiri Strawberry Bananaa Tropical Fusion Watermelon Jolly Rancher Sour Green Apple Pudding Edit Banana Creama Boston Cream Piec Butterscotcha Candy Caneb Caramel Cheesecakea Chocolatea Chocolate Fudgea Chocolate Vanilla Swirlc Classic Turtleb Coconut Cream Creme bruleec Custard Dark Chocolatec Devil s Food Double Chocolatec Dulce De Lechec Flan French Vanilla Gingerbreadb Lemona Mixchief Vanilla Color Changing Orange Ice Creamc Oreo Cookies n Creme Pistachioa Pumpkin Spiceb Red Velvet Rice Pudding S more pudding Strawberry Cheesecakec Strawberry Creme Strawberry Ice Creamc Tapioca Vanillaa White Chocolatea a Also available in a sugar free low calorie product b Available seasonally c Only available as a prepared product Discontinued flavors EditApple Banana Orange Black Raspberry Blackberry Bubble Gum Celery Chocolate Gelatin Chocolate Ice Cream Powder Coffee Cola Concord Grape Cotton Candy Cranberry Strawberry Cranberry Raspberry Green Apple Root Beer Italian Salad Lemon Lime Lemon Ice Cream Powder Melon Berry Mixed Vegetable Orange Banana Orange Coconut pudding Orange Pineapple Passion Fruit Pineapple Grapefruit Maple Syrup Plain Raspberry Mango Seasoned Tomato Sparkling Berry Sparkling Mandarin Orange Sparkling White Grape Strawberry Punch Strawberry Kiwi Triple Chocolate Tomato Tropical Fruit Unflavored Ice Cream Powder Vanilla Ice Cream Powder Wild Cherry Wild Raspberry Wild Strawberry Watermelon CandySee also EditJello salad Aeroplane Jelly Jell O Museum Jello Biafra Green Jello AspicReferences Edit Purdom Candace 10 April 2001 Program on History of Gelatin Breaks the Mold Shedding Light on Familiar Dessert Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on 21 October 2013 Retrieved 20 June 2013 US4084A Improvement in the preparation of portable gelatine Google Patent Search 20 June 1845 Retrieved 2 November 2021 a b Belson Ken May 4 2008 Upstate Where It Was First Made Unwavering Devotion to Jell O The New York Times Archived from the original on October 21 2013 Retrieved July 15 2012 History of Jello The Jell O Gallery Le Roy Historical Society 27 October 2011 Archived from the original on 13 February 2014 Wyman Carolyn 2001 Jell O A Biography The History and Mystery of America s Most Famous Dessert Mariner Books pp 4 5 ISBN 978 0156011235 History Archived from the original on 2018 08 05 Retrieved 2019 03 26 a b c d e f Christy Spackman August 17 2012 Mormonism s Jell O Mold Slate com Archived from the original on August 17 2012 Retrieved August 17 2012 a b c d The New JELL O Book of Surprises Chemical Heritage Foundation Archived from the original on March 13 2016 The Jell O Museum and Gallery Archived from the original on 29 February 2008 Retrieved 12 August 2015 a b c A timeline set in Jell O Deseret News Salt Lake City June 28 2006 Archived from the original on August 5 2013 Retrieved July 15 2012 Business Jell O pulls plug on longtime ad firm 09 10 00 Archived from the original on 2008 10 25 Retrieved 2009 10 14 Jello Again Variety 11 December 1940 p 35 Archived from the original on 19 November 2015 Retrieved 18 November 2015 Sherrie A Inness Dinner Roles American Women and Culinary Culture p 62 66 a b The Des Moines Register Cookbook 1995 Cross Mary 2002 A Century of American Icons 100 Products and Slogans from the 20th Century Consumer Culture Greenwood Press pp 165 167 ISBN 978 0313314810 Retrieved 4 September 2020 Frederix Emily May 16 2010 Bill Cosby amp Jell O Together Again Huffington Post Archived from the original on May 20 2010 Kay Katty 6 February 2001 Utah loves Jell O BBC News Washington Archived from the original on 15 July 2015 Retrieved 12 August 2015 Phillips Valerie February 6 2002 There s green Jell O on your lapel Abundance of food pins are unique to Salt Lake Olympics Deseret News Archived from the original on April 28 2016 Retrieved April 21 2016 Wiggle Room Sunday Morning CBS 27 November 2011 Archived from the original on 22 October 2016 Retrieved 1 August 2016 Jell O Products Archived 2016 08 07 at the Wayback Machine Kraft Retrieved 4 August 2016 Pineapple Jelly MPG YouTube 23 March 2010 Archived from the original on 18 July 2015 Retrieved 12 August 2015 Sampson Susan September 9 2006 Jell O shots pack a bang The Toronto Star Toronto Ontario Canada p M 4 Retrieved August 3 2010 A Jell O shot is a cocktail you can eat My Science Project What is the Ultimate Jell O Shot Archived 2013 10 30 at the Wayback Machine The Art amp Science of the Jello Shot Archived 2012 03 03 at the Wayback Machine DrinkStreet com That Was the Wit That Was SF Weekly April 19 2000 Archived from the original on May 12 2013 Retrieved October 1 2012 a b Thomas Jerry How to Mix Drinks Or The Bon vivant s Companion Dick amp Fitzgerald p 24 Retrieved 2016 03 13 The Joy of Mixology by Gary Regan Clarkson Potter 2003 Pages 15 16 150 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service 2009 03 13 Archived from the original on 2011 01 22 Retrieved 2011 01 17 Jell O teams with DreamworksTV on animated series for YouTube Amazon Prime Video Marketing Dive Archived from the original on 2018 08 06 Retrieved 2018 08 06 a b Gezairy HA 2001 07 17 Form letter EDB 7 3 P6 61 3 PDF World Health Organization Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean Retrieved 2009 05 12 Smith MJ November 2015 Promoting Vaccine Confidence Infectious Disease Clinics of North America Review 29 4 759 69 doi 10 1016 j idc 2015 07 004 PMID 26337737 Samuel H Dresner Seymour Siegel David M Pollock 1982 The Jewish Dietary Laws The Rabbinical Assembly p 97 98 ISBN 978 0 8381 2105 4 Schmidt Arno Fieldhouse Paul 2007 The World Religions Cookbook Greenwood Publishing Group p 99 ISBN 978 0 313 33504 4 Furia Philip Patterson Laurie 2010 The Songs of Hollywood Oxford University Press p 98 ISBN 9780199792665 Retrieved 16 February 2018 A Fine Romance song jello Bolcom William Morris Joan 1980 Lime jello marshmallow cottage cheese surprise Melville N Y E B Marks Music Corp Archived from the original on 17 February 2018 Retrieved 16 February 2018 Forstie Clare 2012 From Rosy to Regrettable Mixed Nostalgia and the Meanings of Jell O Salad Digest A Journal of Foodways and Culture American Folklore Society Archived from the original on 16 February 2018 Retrieved 16 February 2018 Eric Richard 1992 10 06 Second Ig Nobel Ceremony Held The Tech Archived from the original on 2011 12 24 Retrieved 2009 10 14 Jonathan N Axelrod 1995 09 25 Ig Nobel Tickets Go on Sale Awards Ceremony Set to Honor Unusual Achievements Harvard Crimson Herbert Geoff February 14 2020 World s worst band Green Jelly to perform St Patrick s Day concert in Syracuse Syracuse com Retrieved 2021 01 19 Chandler Michael Alison 26 January 2006 Big Screen Religion The Washington Post Archived from the original on 22 October 2016 Retrieved 12 December 2017 the Jell O Belt the self referential term for Utah and Idaho home to large Mormon families that consider the colorful gelatin a staple food for dinner and church socials Crump Steve 21 March 2004 Don t ask me Getting jiggly outside the Jell O Belt The Twin Falls Idaho Times News p B01 Snider Eric D 17 August 2003 Locally produced film headed to 6 festivals Provo Daily Herald A film that was locally produced will find an audience beyond the Jell O Belt Mikita Carole 17 November 2003 Mormon Moviemakers The Sequel KSL TV Reprinted at ldsfilm com entry Archived 2012 02 18 at the Wayback Machine for Saints and Soldiers Editorial board 1 February 2001 Does Jell O belong at Legislature Provo Daily Herald Archived from the original on 27 March 2016 Retrieved 17 August 2012 Resolution Urging Jell O Recognition Utah State Legislature 2001 Archived from the original on Feb 4 2017 Retrieved Oct 27 2014 a b Utah Legislature SR0005 Archived from the original on 20 September 2015 Retrieved 12 August 2015 Merritt Brett 16 October 2003 The pudding Papa Jell O pitchman Bill Cosby jiggles onto the stage at Abravanel Hall Provo Daily Herald Spackman Christy 2012 08 17 Why Do We Associate Jell O With Utah and Mormonism Slate Magazine Retrieved 2022 05 05 JELL O Recipes Archived from the original on 9 February 2013 Retrieved 12 August 2015 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jell O Official website Jell O Gallery Museum How to Make Jello Portal Food Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jell O amp oldid 1131100164, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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