Who is the creator of oreos




















While it went national in April, it was just a month before that the National Biscuit Company first registered the product with the US Patent and Trademark Office registration number It is commonly stated the given date of registration was March 6th, which is why that is National Oreo Day.

However, a simple patent and trademark search reveals that oft-repeated date is incorrect. In fact, it was actually filed on March 14, and registered on August 12, So how did they come up with the idea of the Oreo?

By using the time-honored business practice of stealing the idea from a competitor and then marketing it better than the original. You see, there was another popular creme-filled sandwich cookie that came before the Oreo, made by Sunshine Biscuits. Wiles, the former of which were originally part of the great bakery conglomeration of the one that formed into the National Biscuit Company. Wanting a more personal approach to baking and not wanting to be lost in the bakery conglomerate, Loose liquidated his assets and helped form Sunshine Biscuits.

The company actually was the third largest cookie baker in the US when it was acquired in by Keebler. To this day, the Sunshine brand still appears on Cheez-its, among other products. In any event, in , four years before the Oreo, Sunshine debuted the upscale, and soon to be very popular, Hydrox biscuit, which the Oreo was a pretty blatant rip-off of, cream filling, embossing and all.

Of course, Nabisco denies this is where the idea for the Oreo came from, but the evidence at hand strongly indicates otherwise. As for the name, there has never been a firm answer for why the National Biscuit Company chose "Oreo," though there are several theories.

In it, he croons that "Twinkies and Ding Dongs" just won't do, because Oreo cookies are all he really needs. It might surprise you to know there was a time when you couldn't get an Oreo in pretty much every flavor imaginable , but that time was very real.

The first flavor Oreo added to the brand was lemon-filled, but it was soon discontinued, according to Biscuit People. It wasn't until the s when the company began releasing numerous limited edition and holiday-themed flavors every year. What should have been such an obvious combination blew the minds of '90s kids everywhere, so much so that director Nancy Meyers is still getting asked about it. Meyers told HelloGiggles in that she just made it up "for no reason other than it sounded weird and some cute kid would do it.

Oreo got its start at the Nabisco headquarters in New York City. And although Google has since purchased the building, Oreo has definitely left a mark on the area. In , an entire stretch of Ninth Avenue in New York, where the building stands, was renamed "Oreo Way" to commemorate the cookie and its impact on the country, according to Smithsonian magazine. Oreo cookies are technically vegan, according to Delish. The ingredients are fairly simple and include sugar, flour, oil, cocoa, high fructose corn syrup, leavening, cornstarch, salt, soy lecithin, vanillin, and chocolate.

They are "technically vegan" because although there are no animal ingredients on the list, the company is careful to warn that cross-contamination with dairy products is possible. In , Nabisco had an idea for a new cookie, though it wasn't exactly its own—two chocolate disks with a creme filling in between had been done already by the Sunshine Biscuits company in , which called the cookie Hydrox.

While Nabisco has never named Hydrox as its inspiration, the Oreo cookie invented four years after the world was introduced to Hydrox closely resembled the biscuit that preceded it: two decorated chocolate discs with white creme sandwiched between them. Despite its potentially suspicious origination, the Oreo made a name for itself and quickly surpassed the popularity of its competitor.

Nabisco made sure to file for a trademark on the new cookie soon after its creation on March 14, The request was granted on August 12, When the cookie was first introduced in , it appeared as an Oreo Biscuit, which changed in to an Oreo Sandwich.

There was another name change in to Oreo Creme Sandwich before the company settled on the name that was decided upon in Oreo Chocolate Sandwich Cookie. Despite the roller coaster of official name changes, most people have always referred to the cookie simply as an "Oreo. So where did the "Oreo" part even come from? The people at Nabisco aren't quite sure anymore. Some believe that the cookie's name was taken from the French word for gold , or the main color on early Oreo packaging.

Others claim the name stemmed from the hill-shaped test version that never even made it to store shelves, inspiring the cookie prototype to be named the Greek word for mountain, oreo. Some speculate that the name is a combination of taking the "re" from "c re am" and sandwiching it, just like the cookie, between the two "o"s in "ch o c o late"—making "o-re-o. Still others offer the bare explanation that the cookie was named Oreo because it was short, fun, and easy to pronounce.

Though the true naming process may never be revealed, that has not affected Oreo sales. As of , it was estimated that billion Oreo cookies have been sold since , planting it firmly at the top of cookie sales and winning over the hearts of millions. Heaven just got a little more stuf. Sam J. He had been employed at Nabisco for 34 years and through his work made life a little sweeter for everyone.



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