Candy cane From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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See also: Candy stick
A traditional candy cane (left) and a Nestlé Spree version (right).
A candy cane is a hard cane-shaped candy stick. It is traditionally white with red stripes and flavored with peppermint or cinnamon (also known respectively as a peppermint stickor cinnamon stick);[citation needed] however, it is also made in a variety of other flavors and may be decorated with stripes of different colors and thicknesses. The candy cane is available year-round, but traditionally surrounds the Christmas holiday, particularly in the Western world.
Contents[hide]In North America, the first documented example of the use of candy canes to celebrate Christmas occurred in 1847, when a German-Swedish immigrant by the name of August Imgard hung the candy canes from the branches of a Christmas tree. Christmas cards from the following decades show Christmas trees decorated with candy canes, first white canes, then striped ones in the 20th century. This then spread to the rest of the continent, where it continues to remain a popular Christmas tradition.[8]
Candy canes are primarily used as a decoration for Christmas trees. This is done by using the "hook" shape of the candy cane to hang them on branches of the Christmas tree. A single tree can have many candy canes.
Red stripes and peppermint flavorThe stripes are made similar in fashion to a barber's pole, with the red stripes twisting around the white stick of sugar.[9] These signature stripes did not become part of the candy cane until the 20th century.[10][11] It is uncertain who first started using the stripes, but evidence of their use only appears after the turn of the century. At around this time, candy makers began using peppermint as a flavor.[12]. One of the first documented candy canes in this form is the polkagris, invented in 1859. Mass productionBobs Candies was the first company to successfully mass-produce and distribute candy canes while preserving their freshness. Lt. Bob McCormack began making candy canes as special Christmas treats in the 1920s.[13] That decade also saw the company's use of cellophane as a wrapping to keep moisture from damaging the candies, and by the 1950s, they were using a candy cane machine invented by his brother-in-law Gregory Keller to mass-produce them. These two inventions made it feasible to mass produce, ship, and distribute candy canes.[14] The following years saw further refinements in packaging and design to protect the candies from being broken, making it more practical to store them and ship them for longer periods of time.[15] Modern reinterpretationsThere is a modern allegorical tradition that reinterprets the candy cane's shape as a "J", standing for Jesus Christ or the right side up standing for the sheperds that came to visit baby Jesus. The stripes are said to represent his sacrifice, with the red being blood, and the white being purity. However, no historical information to support any claim that the cane was originally made with this allegory in mind has been produced, so it is regarded as an urban legend.[16] Other uses of the patternCandy cane stripes have been used as a daymark for lighthouses. See White Shoal Light. Indeed, the phrase "Candy stripe" is a generic description of the candy cane color scheme. Candy striper is a generic name for a hospital volunteer. This is a helical pattern reminiscent of Barber's poles.[17]You can go to the deserted fairgrounds and go to haunted foods. If it's not in there, then you can go to the auctions. Or you can go to the shop wizard and type it in. I did that, but all I could find was two that were 77,000 and 89,000, I know that's a lot, but maybe you'll have better luck with it. Hope this helps!:)
Sounds like someone is cheating...