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Historic (rec.food.historic) Discussing and discovering how food was made and prepared way back when--From ancient times down until (& possibly including or even going slightly beyond) the times when industrial revolution began to change our lives. |
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Can anyone tell me where/if Postum is still available? I have searched
everywhere I can think of without result. Been drinking the stuff over 7 decades. Miss it. If don't know but can give me a lead or two on how to search for it (I've tried Googling) please do. Arthur Bay |
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Arthur Bay > wrote in news:c5u1c0$5t625$1@ID-
63925.news.uni-berlin.de: > Can anyone tell me where/if Postum is still available? I have searched > everywhere I can think of without result. Been drinking the stuff over > 7 decades. Miss it. If don't know but can give me a lead or two on how > to search for it (I've tried Googling) please do. > > Arthur Bay > > Hee hee, I briefly though this was a continuation of the "Possum" thread... Try the Vermont Country Sto http://tinyurl.com/yr7vn d ![]() |
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Arthur Bay > wrote in message >...
> Can anyone tell me where/if Postum is still available? I have searched > everywhere I can think of without result. Been drinking the stuff over > 7 decades. Miss it. If don't know but can give me a lead or two on how > to search for it (I've tried Googling) please do. If your local grocery stopped carrying it, you might want to get them to special order it... it's still available in Southern California grocery stores, though not all of them. I think it's manufactured by General Foods / Kraft Foods. R. Yang |
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I have seen Postum in the store here in California recently---what I
really miss is Royal Lunch Milk Crackers, though |
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Postum, to, my knowledge, was started during WWII as a substitute for
coffee. Why would anyone actually "WANT" to drink it? It's kinda like that horible stuff the Brits used during the war, , What was it? vegamite? or something just as yukie, , , , , My Grandfather and Grandmother drank Postum during the war, but no one else in the family would drink it. Except for nostalgia, and remember, , , , , , , Nostalgia ain't what it used to be. Ron C. ======================= On Wed, 21 Apr 2004 00:40:38 -0700, (Patrick Porter) wrote: >I have seen Postum in the store here in California recently---what I >really miss is Royal Lunch Milk Crackers, though |
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Nah, Postum was commercialized at the turn of the 20th Century by CW Post,
who had enjoyed similar cereal coffees at the Battle Creek Sanitarium then run on Adventist vegetarian principles by the Kellogg brothers. Post was a recovered patient, who marketed Postum, then went into the breakfast cereal business. Harvey Kellogg then broke with his older brother to found a company to commercialize corn flakes, another instant breakfast cereal that actually had been invented by his brother. But the idea of cereal coffees may be older than coffee in Europe. It is likely older than the US, but certainly documented in cookbooks before the Civil War, and extensively discussed in Confederate sources during the war. -- -Mark H. Zanger author, The American History Cookbook, The American Ethnic Cookbook for Students www.ethnicook.com www.historycook.com "Dr " > wrote in message ... > Postum, to, my knowledge, was started during WWII as a substitute for > coffee. > > Why would anyone actually "WANT" to drink it? > It's kinda like that horible stuff the Brits used during the war, , > > What was it? vegamite? or something just as yukie, , , , , > My Grandfather and Grandmother drank Postum during the war, but no one > else in the family would drink it. > > Except for nostalgia, and remember, , , , , , , > Nostalgia ain't what it used to be. > > Ron C. > > ======================= > On Wed, 21 Apr 2004 00:40:38 -0700, (Patrick Porter) > wrote: > > >I have seen Postum in the store here in California recently---what I > >really miss is Royal Lunch Milk Crackers, though > |
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>Harvey Kellogg then broke with his older brother to found a
>company to commercialize corn flakes, another instant breakfast cereal that >actually had been invented by his brother. Mark: It was the reverse-- Will K. Kellogg was the younger brother. He removed Harvey from the Board of the Kellogg Corn Flakes Company, and commercialized the product, much to the opposition of Harvey. Will made big bucks while Harvey maintained the Sanatarium They didn't speak for years, although Will did help Harvey out financially from time to time. Andy Smith |
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Searching for Postum is much like trying to find Vegamite!
Neither one tasts very good, and why would anyone even WANT to find it ? :-}~nyuk nyuk nyuk, , , , , Ron C. =========================== On Sun, 18 Apr 2004 08:55:14 -0500, Arthur Bay > wrote: >Can anyone tell me where/if Postum is still available? I have searched >everywhere I can think of without result. Been drinking the stuff over >7 decades. Miss it. If don't know but can give me a lead or two on how >to search for it (I've tried Googling) please do. > >Arthur Bay |
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Postum is available ONLINE at the Vermont Country Store website. The URL is
www.vermontcountrystore.com. CHEERS! |
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