Wachholder Ham Waddell Hall Apples Wadschinken Wafers -- Benne Wafers -- Chocolate Wafers -- Graham Wafers -- Tunbridge Wells Wafers -- Vanilla Waffle Iron Waffles Waffles -- Belgian Wagarashi Wagashi Wagashi -- Daifuku Wagashi -- Namagashi Wagener Apple Wagon Wheels Wagyu Beef Waikato Potatoes Waikato Potatoes Waimate Berries Waimea Potatoes Wakame Wakame Soba Wakatay Mint Waldo Berries Waldorf Astoria Cake Waldorf Salad Walewska -- À la Walla Walla Onions Walms Walnut Butter Walnut Oil Walnut Sauce Walnuts Previous | Next | Cracker Barrel© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforcedCrackers were just shipped as generic items in barrels to general stores in North America, where they would be sold by the handful. It was a man named Adolphus Green who decided in 1898 that he didn't want his crackers to be anonymous. He had his crackers made in octagonal shapes so that they would stand out from the square ones, and he sold them in a waxed paper lined box. He called them "Uneeda Biscuits." He used the word biscuit rather than cracker to be a little more upmarket. Green's method of packaging ensured that the crackers reached the customer's home fresh; bulk-sold crackers in a barrel were often stale. And so began the decline and disappearance of the Cracker Barrel. At the time he was President of the National Biscuit Company, formed by a merger between the American Biscuit & Manufacturing Company and the New York Biscuit Company that same year. Three years later, by 1901, the company was being referred to as Nabisco, taking the first few letters in each word of "National Biscuit Company", though Nabisco didn't replace National Biscuit Company legally until a corporate name change in 1971. Cracker Barrel Restaurants and Stores were started in 1969 in Lebanon, Tennessee by Dan Evins.
See Also:CrackersOther entries for: Technical TermsAccolade, Acetic Acid, Air-Layered, Alliumophobia, Alpha Amylase, Alum, Alveograph, Ascorbic Acid, Best Before Dates, Biologique, Butyric Acid, Carbonic Acid, Carnauba Wax, Chocolate Bloom, Collops, Cracker Barrel, Cucina Casalinga, Cultivar, Deipnophobia, Dioecious Plants, Du Jour, Dunking, Etiolation, EU Designations, F1, Firkin, Free-Range Chickens, Free-Range Total Freedom, French Revolutionary Calendar, Gastrique, Gâte-sauce, Gomme Arabique, Hybrid, Invaiatura, Kosher, Lachanophobia, Lime (Chemical), Listeria, Lye, Mageirocophobia, Maillard Reaction, Open Pollinated, Ostraconophobia, Oxalic Acid, Pack Date, Pavé, Phosphoric Acid, Plant Variety Protection, Pome, Potassium Nitrite, Potluck Suppers, Punnet, Quinine, Rifilature, Scald (Fruit), Sell-By Dates, Sodium Nitrite, Stufatura, Sunday Roast, Traditional Free-Range, Turophile, Use-By Dates, Yatai, Ye Shi, Yearling, Yuuki |
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