Kool-Aid.
Ever since 1978 when the “Reverend†Jim Jones convinced 900 of his followers to commit mass suicide by drinking a cyanide laced – powdered soft drink mix, the phrase “drinking the Kool-Aid†has come to mean the act of becoming “a firm believer in something; to accept an argument or philosophy wholeheartedly or blindly.†It is a bit of an historical oddity that “Kool-Aid†took the rap for the Jonestown deaths, when the powdered drink mix that was whipped up and consumed at “Reverend†Jones’s afternoon party was actually an imitation of Kool-Aid called “Flavor-Aid.â€
The current derogatory usage of the term “Kool-Aid,†which we surely will hear tossed back and forth, ad nauseam, between now and November 2nd, got me to thinking about the real Kool-Aid.
It turns out that the stuff that originally started out in approximately 1920 as a liquid fruit-flavored concentrate called “Fruit Smack†(a name that would not work very well today, methinks) was turned into a powder in 1927 and called “Kool-Ade” by Edwin Perkins in Nebraska. (He later changed the name to “Kool-Aid.”) The drink mix became so successful that Perkins moved the business in Chicago in 1931. See the History of Kool-Aid.
In 1953, Perkins sold the company to General Foods, and Kool-Aid became the product that I knew as a boy. Back then it was unsweetened, and making it required a “healthy†helping of sugar and lots of stirring, unless your mother was slick and made it with warm water to dissolve the sugar and then chilled it.
My friends and I would take turns pestering our respective mothers to buy the stuff and make it so that we could flex our entrepreneurial muscles by setting up Kool-Aid stands during the long, hot summer months. As I recall, we sold a small glass for a penny, a medium glass for three cents, and a large one was a whole nickel. I believe that we actually used three real glasses – no paper cups, and I hate to admit that I do not recall how (or even if) we washed the glasses between customers. However, more often than not, we would become bored with the whole thing and drink up our entire inventory, split our meager “profits,†and head off to the playground.
I got to wondering whether one can still buy Kool-Aid, and I quickly discovered that Kool-Aid is very much alive and well. (I guess you can tell that I don’t watch kids’ tv these days.) There are at least fifteen kinds of Kool-Aid drink mixes in all sorts of flavors, and they come pre-sweetened and unsweetened.
In addition, Kool-Aid is not just limited to drink mixes. There are a host of other Kool-Aid products such as: Bursts, Gel Snacks, Jammers, Twists, Magic Twists, and Mad Scientwists. You may also be interested to know that Kool-Aid is now available in the U.K. (I’m sure that Tony Blair has heard the term, even if he has not tried the drink.)
People dye fibers with the Kool-Aid (protein fibers only, please) and use it in recipes. Finally and nor surprisingly, there are people who collect Kool-Aid Packages and other Kool-Aid Stuff. Here is an interesting site that contains a photo archive of Kool-Aid packages, along with a display of Kool-Aid “Klones†and trader information.
I wonder if it still tastes the same as it did during those hot, New Jersey summers when we would drink up the inventory one three cent glass at a time.**
**We used to get served a powdered fruit mix in the Army that we called “Bug Juice,†but I doubt that it was really Kool-Aid. It was probably the kind of stuff that the Jonestown folks drank, only without the cyanide.
We had a concotion in the Navy we called Bug Juice too. The only question I have is are you sure the cyanide was left out? It was always the most disgusting vile stuff I ever come across. Also I always noted that Bug Juice was not called by a flavor but by color. Red Bug Juice, Green Bug Juice. Why was that?
Comment by Sarpy Sam — July 17, 2004 @ 6:54 am
I am guilty of using the phrase A Lot. I have for years. I never even thought about it! Hmmm
I still make it when my family comes to visit. I don’t want the kids to drink too much soda, thats not good with the heat, and I kid myself that it’s better since it has vitamin C. I also freeze it for nice little grab and go cool treats.
And while it’s stil the same basic stuff, I don’t think it tastes nearly as good as it did when we were 10 years old, sittin on the sidewalk dreaming of all those profits we just drank!
Comment by Tammi — July 17, 2004 @ 7:14 am
Sam,
I think the colors were just a cruel trick.
Comment by Jim - Parkway Rest Stop — July 17, 2004 @ 11:04 am
Tammi,
I’m sure that the kids LOVE to visit you. Ice pop treats! And, I’m glad to see that the folks where you live call soda, well, “soda,” and not “pop.”
Comment by Jim - Parkway Rest Stop — July 17, 2004 @ 11:07 am
KOOL-AID THOUGHTS
Via Tammi of Road Warrior Survival, I found that Jim of Parkway Rest Stop has a short piece on the history of Kool-Aid. If you have fond memories of the stuff from your childhood (after which you probably gave it…
Trackback by Bad Example — July 17, 2004 @ 11:13 am
One of my favorites as a kid. Hell, I raid the stuff my sister makes for my nephews even now!
Another use for Kool-Aid: Grape removes rust. I can’t tell you the ratio of powder to water, but I do know it works. A co-worker of mine used it to free up some severely rusted parts.
Comment by That 1 Guy — July 17, 2004 @ 6:16 pm
The Perfect Saturday Post
Jim at Parkway Rest Stop takes us on a little walk down memory lane with the Kool-Aid guy!! He has a wonderful round up on that delightful stuff that made many of us smile when we were young (well until…
Trackback by Tammi's World — June 5, 2005 @ 4:27 pm