Read Twinkie, Deconstructed Online
Authors: Steve Ettlinger
Pine trees
Pizza
Planters Cotton Oil Mill
Plaque
Plaster
Plastic
Platinum
Pockle (phosphorus, oxygen, chloride [P-O-C])
Point of origin
Pollution
Polyethylene
Polysorbate
Polysorbate
Polysorbate
Polyurethane foam
Potassium bicarbonate
Potassium carbonate
Potassium hydroxide
Potassium iodide
Potassium sorbate
Potatoes
Pound cakes
PPG Industries
Pregelatinized starch
Preservatives
Procter & Gamble
Propylene gas
Propylene glycol
Propylene oxide
Protein
Pteroic acid
Pteroyl-L-glutamic acid
Purac
PVC (polyvinylchloride)
Questar
Quicklime
Quincy, Massachusetts
Raw food
Raw sugar
Red No.
Reduced iron
Refined sugar
Refractometer
Rennet
Rhodia
Riboflavin
Rice
Riha, Bill
Rillieux, Norbert
Ring dryer
Ronzoni pasta
Rose hips
Rumford Baking Powder
Rust
Sabatier, Paul
Sackett, Augustine
St. Joseph, Missouri
St. Louis, Missouri
Ste. Genevieve, Missouri
Sal soda
Salad dressings
Salaratus
Saltpeter
Saturated fats
Schaeffer’s Salt
Scheele, Carl Wilhelm
Scurvy
Sea salt
Sensient Colors Inc.
Sensient Technologies
Serving sizes
Sesame seeds
Shanghai Dyestuffs Research Institute Company, Ltd.
Sheetrock
Shelf life
Shellac
Shoemaker, Kevin
Shortening
Silica
Silver Springs, New York
Simmons, Amelia
Sinopec
Slim-Fast Optima
Smith, Terry
Smuckers Reduced Fat Natural
Style Peanut Butter
Soap
Soda ash
Soda Springs, Idaho
Sodium
Sodium acid phosphate
Sodium acid pyrophosphate (SAPP)
Sodium aluminum sulfate
Sodium bicarbonate (
see
Baking soda)
Sodium carbonate
Sodium carboxymethyl-cellulose (CMC)
Sodium caseinate
Sodium chloride (NaC1)
Sodium ferrocyanide
Sodium hydroxide
Sodium methoxide
Sodium monochloroacetate
Sodium nitrite
Sodium sesquicarbonate
Sodium silicoaluminate
Sodium stearate
Sodium stearoyl lactylate
Soft drinks
Solae Company
Solution mining
Solvay process
Sorbic acid (trans trans 2, 4-hexadienoic acid)
Sorbin
Sorbit
Sorbitan monostearate (SMS)
Sorbitol
Sourdough
South Beach Diet
Southard, Oklahoma
Soy flour
Soy grits
Soy protein isolate
Soybean oil
Soybeans
Spanish barilla
Sparks, Maryland
Spent bee grain
SPI Polyols
Spinach
Sponge cake
Sports drinks
Starbucks
Frappuccino
Low Fat Latte ice cream
Starch
Stearic acid
Steel pickling
Steep water
Straw
Sucrose
Sugar
Sugar beets
Sugar Trust
Sugarcane
Sulfanilic acid
Sulfate
Sulfur
Sulfur dioxide
Sulfuric acid
Sunflower oil
Surfactant
Suzy Q’s
Swiss Miss Hot Cocoa Mix
Sydney, Iowa
Table sugar (
see
Sucrose) Tallow
Tapioca starch
Tartaric acid
Tate & Lyle
Terre Haute, Indiana
Texas City, Texas
Thiamine
Thiamine hydrochloride
Thiamine mononitrate
Thinned starches
Thomas, Glenda
Thompson, Benjamin
Tianjin Zhongjin Pharmaceutical Company
Titanium dioxide
Tobacco
Tofu
Tollhouse Mint Brownie Bars
Toothpaste
Tortillas
Trans fats
Trees
Tribasic phosphate
Triglycerides
Triscuits
Trona
Trudeau, G. B.
Tryptophan
Tums
Turmeric
Twin Rivers Technologies
“Twinkie defense,”
UK Patent Office
Union Pacific Railroad
Union Sugar Company
Uniqema
United States Gypsum (USG)
United Sugar
University of Iowa
Unsaturated fats
Uranium
Urine
Vanadium
Vanadium oxide
Vanilla
artificial
Vanillin (4-hydroxy-3-methoxybenzaldehyde)
Vaseline Intensive Care Dry Skin Lotion
n
Vegetable oil
Veggie Slices Cheese Alternative American Flavor Organic
Velveeta cheese sauces
Vinegar
Vitamin B1
Vitamin B2
Vitamin B3
Vitamin B9
Vitamin C
Vitamins
Vulcan Spice Mills
Wakefield, Nebraska
Walsh, Kelly
Wanaque Reservoir, New Jersey
Washing soda
Water
Watt, James
Waukegan, Illinois
Waupun, Wisconsin
Waxy maize or corn
Wayne, New Jersey
Western Phosphate Field
Wheat
Wheat starch
Whey
Whey protein concentrate
White, Dan
Wills, Lucy
Wise
Cheez Doodles
Sour Cream and Onion Potato Chips
Wish-Bone Fat Free Chunky
Blue Cheese salad dressing
Wonder Bread
World War I
World War II
Xanthan gum
Yeast
Yellow #2 dent field corn
Yellow No.
Yellow prussiate of soda
Yogurt
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Steve Ettlinger has been an author, editor, and book producer since 1985, and has created more than a dozen popular reference books that have sold more than a million copies. He has appeared on
The Today Show
,
CBS This Morning
,
Good Morning America
,
Fox News
,
Live with Regis and Kathie Lee
, the Food Network, and dozens of other television and radio shows.
Ettlinger lived in Paris for six years, where he managed to eat at many of the world’s finest restaurants. He has previously worked as an assistant chef and enjoys old home repair and renovation, cooking, sailing, and African drumming. A graduate of Tufts University, he lives in New York City with his wife, Gusty Lange, and their two children.
1. The Twinkies ingredient list, like that of other processed foods, is not etched in stone. It varies over time and even from bakery to bakery as laws (i.e., trans fats are now banned) or prices or cooking techniques change, so don’t freak out if your Twinkie box doesn’t match the list used here.
10. The late 1800s was a period of newly improved commerce and communication, some sophisticated (railroads, newspapers, telegraph) and some not (snake oil and other creative traveling salesmen). This was fertile ground for the wild claims and major ad campaigns of early baking powders—Clabber Girl
®
and Davis
®
, as well as Oetker and Kraft’s Calumet
®
Baking Powder, all still alive and competing today, even if (curiously) Rumford
®
, Clabber Girl
®
, and Davis
®
are now all made by the same company—including spurious assertions that competitors’ powders, among the first chemicals sold as convenience food, were made with poison. This led to the demand for honesty in packaging, which in turn led to the 1905 ingredient labeling laws that formed the basis for the labels we have today—and the inspiration for this book.
11. Several of the professionals I spoke with willingly tasted Twinkies, often for the first time since they were kids, and though they usually scoffed at their own diminished desire for such sweet things, they were impressed with Twinkies’ successful blend of flavors. One renowned flavorist, consultant to the biggest consumer food product companies in the world (who shall remain anonymous for obvious reasons) offered the following (technically and scientifically accurate) assessment upon a Twinkie tasting: “Gee, that’s
great
!”
12. Candles, soaps, plastics, pastels, lubricants, and cosmetics (such as Vaseline
®
Intensive Care Dry Skin Lotion) all claim stearic acid as an ingredient, there mostly to add slipperiness and bulk.
13. Small change is in the air, however, and domestic casein production might well begin again. The USDA has or had what appears to be a small, secret program to sell some surplus dried milk to several U.S. companies that can make caseinates, but has some kind of gag order and is not forthcoming with details.
14. Because Perkin extracted the aniline from coal tar, and because for years coal tar was the only source of benzene for dyes, they are still known as “coal tar” dyes despite the fact the most of them are made from oil and natural gas.
2. Some hydrogen is burnt with chlorine to make hydrochloric acid (HCl), an important part of a bunch of other food ingredient recipes.
3. Most of the professionals asked to name the vitamin manufacturers actually cite a company that has been defunct for several years, hardly a reassuring element in the food-processing picture.
4. Folic acid may even contribute to reduced stroke and heart disease.
5. In a way, flour is overshadowed by the sugar and sweeteners that follow it on the ingredient list. In the future, sugars may be broken down on the label by sucrose vs sweeteners, much as fats are now labeled. Sophisticated consumers will embrace that change and the cane sugar industry, which is always battling the corn sweetener industry, will love it.
6. Now American Sugar Refining Inc., of which Florida Crystals is part owner.
7. Almost half is grown from genetically modified (GM) seeds, created by companies like Monsanto to resist its Roundup
®
herbicide; the trend, thanks in part to Monsanto’s strong marketing skills, indicates that there will be more GM corn in the future.
8. Most important, shortening has a much higher melting point than butter, more akin to lard’s, so it acts as a space holder to create air pockets in cakes or pie shells, making them tender and flaky.
9. This explains why beef fat showed up on more Twinkies ingredient labels in 2006 (it appeared less often before), and why the shortening is now called “vegetable and/or animal shortening.” That’s why Twinkies are no longer kosher, not that all of them were. Apparently only one or two of the various Hostess bakeries made kosher Twinkies, for what it’s worth. Kosher foods are often viewed by consumers who don’t need to eat kosher foods as slightly better than nonkosher foods, even snack cakes, somewhat akin to the way “all natural” labels boost sales on things like ice cream.