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The company had another site in Argentina, known as Fábrica Colόn or Pueblo Liebig, six miles (ten kilometres) north of the city of Colόn. It was in a town called Villa Colόn, founded by General Justo José de Urquiza. A beef-salting and drying operation had been established there by an Apolinario Benitez with his brother. They sold it to a John O'Connor from Ireland; He sold it in 1889 to the "Sociedad Argentina de Carnes", and by 1905 it was a Liebig operation. The factory made tinned beef tongue as well as the extract. In Argentina, the factory provided workers with company homes and running water. The manager's side of town had tennis courts. The ships came up the river right to the plant, which employed 3,200 people and processed 1,200 cows a day. In 1965, the plant started shipping frozen beef as well. The town was renamed to Pueblo Liebig on 17 May 1975. In 1980, the factory town and site were sold to the Vizental family. They operated a meat processing business there until they closed it in 1997, but the town is still mostly owned by them. Today (2007) most of the factory site is in ruins. The third large plant OXO plant was opened in Paraguay in 1923. The company also made Liebig's Infant Food. The Liebig Company's Practical Cookery Book was published in many countries and languages, with each edition containing recipes reflecting the food preferences in that country (as well as including Liebig's Extract of Beef in as many of the recipes as possible.) It was first published in the 1870s in Germany, written by Henriette Davidis (1801 - 1876), then in Austria, then in America, where it was written by Maria Parloa. In 1984, it was published in Great Britain, written by Hannah M. Young. The company released beautiful, coloured lithograph trading cards throughout its history (and well into the OXO days.) There are over 7,000 sets in all, in different languages. The earliest cards in English date from somewhere between 1873 and 1878, appearing both in England and in America. Many of the cards were advertising, but many were also meant to be educational on topics from plants to fish to music, at a time when many families couldn't afford books. They were produced up until about 1964 in most places; 1974 in Italy. Liebig also invented the kind of conical flask that is still used in labs today. University of Giessen is now named after Liebig, "Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen" Liebig still has descendants alive today (2006.) _______________________________________ [1] Liebig was also wrong in thinking that searing the outside of meat would seal in juices, but he was so forceful a voice in the scientific field at the time that his ideas influenced several generations of food writers, and still do.
Finlay, Mark R., "Quackery and Cookery: Justus von Liebig's Extract of Meat and the Theory of Nutrition in the Victorian Age." Bulletin of the History of Medicine 66 (Fall 1992): 404-418. Also called: Estratto di carne Liebig (Italian); Extracto de carne de Liebig (Spanish)
See Also:Fray Bentos Pies, Maria Parloa, OXOOther entries for: CondimentsLiebig's Extract of Meat, Pastes, Relish, Salt, Sauces, Spreads, Tracklements, Vinegar |
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