- Triscuit
Triscuit is a brand of
Nabisco snack crackers which take the form of squarebake dwhole wheat wafers. It was invented in 1900, a patent was granted in 1902, [cite web
last = Perky
first = Henry
title = Filamentous Cracker - Patent No. 713,795
url=http://www.google.com/patents?id=vwBAAAAAEBAJ&printsec=abstract&zoom=4&dq=%22cracker+of+filamentous+or+shredded+wheat%22#PPP2,M1
accessdate = 2008-02-02] and the Shredded Wheat Company, inNiagara Falls, New York began production the next year.cite web
last = Hughes
first = Nancy
title = HowStuffWorks - How Triscuits Work
url=http://home.howstuffworks.com/how-triscuits-work.htm
accessdate = 2008-02-02 ]Triscuits Production
Production of the Triscuit wafer began in 1903 at the Niagara Falls, New York plant with the Triscuit packaging boasting “Baked by Electricity.” The wafer measured 2-1/4 inches by 4 inches and remained that size for nearly twenty-one years. At that point, the ovens were altered and improved and the cracker size changed to a 2 inch by 2 inch square.
To make Triscuits today, the wheat is first cooked in water until its moisture content reaches about 50%. It is then tempered, allowing moisture to diffuse evenly into the grain. The grain then passes through a set of rollers with grooves in one side, yielding a web of shredded wheat strands.
Many webs are stacked together, and this moist stack of strands is crimped at regular intervals to produce individual pieces of cereal with the strands attached at each end. These then go into an oven, where they are baked until their moisture content is reduced to five percent.
In 1935, in order to better address consumer taste preferences, Triscuit crackers were sprayed with oil and lightly salted. The flavors remained the same until 1984 when popular tastes changed again. The public wanted nutritious wafers, but they also demanded more out of those wafers, including additional choices, “crunch” appeal, and flavor varieties. There are now eleven Triscuit varieties on store shelves.
In 2008, the packaging was changed.
Notes & References
External links
* [http://www.nabiscoworld.com/triscuit/ NabiscoWorld: Triscuit]
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