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The Brownie Turns 100 This Year

 Andrew Lofters    Created:  8/22/2006 10:24:08 AM  Updated: 8/22/2006 10:25:57 AM
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Unknown -- The brownie, which nearly 80% of Americans eat, has fairly humble beginnings.

Some say it was a chocolate cake that fell, and got served anyway. Others say its name was borne of its creator, a woman named, you guessed it: brownie.

Food historians say the brownie was first mentioned in Fannie Farmers 1905 Boston Cooking School Cook Book, which was a version of an earlier recipe for cookies. Brownies didn?t really become popular until the 1920s and were largely confined to America.

Around the end of World War I, people started looking for foods that were more convenient, and the brownie was a dessert that could be eaten with your hands or taken along on a ride in the country in the newly popular automobile. Brownies are still popular, with mixes being used in place of scratch-made, but with most of the same ingredients being the same these hundred years later.

Associated Press



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