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<item>
  <id>11627</id>
  <title>How Did Cracker Jack Become Synonymous with Baseball?</title>
  <published_at>Tue Apr 14 15:55:00 -0700 2009</published_at>
  <link>http://www.chow.com/stories/11627</link>
  <pubDate>Tue, 14 Apr 2009 22:55:00 GMT</pubDate>
  <short_description>A good jingle does it every time</short_description>
  <long_description>A good jingle does it every time.</long_description>
  <img>http://www.chow.com/assets/2008/05/NQ_105_3.jpg</img>
  <author>Roxanne Webber</author>
  <category>
    <id>62</id>
    <name>Nagging Question</name>
  </category>
  <pages>
    <page>
      <page_number>1</page_number>
      <content>
        <![CDATA[<h3>&#8220;Buy me some peanuts and a Tootsie Roll&#8221; just didn&#8217;t work. Instead, when Jack Norworth wrote the lyrics to &#8220;Take Me Out to the Ball Game&#8221; in 1908, he called out Cracker Jack. The molasses, peanut, and popcorn snack&#8217;s firm association with baseball is &#8220;undoubtedly the result&#8221; of the song, says Tim Wiles, the research director for the Baseball Hall of Fame and coauthor of <a target="blank" href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/142343188X?ie=UTF8&#38;tag=c037-20&#38;linkCode=as2&#38;camp=1789&#38;creative=9325&#38;creativeASIN=142343188X"><i>Baseball&#8217;s Greatest Hit: The Story of Take Me Out to the Ball Game</i></a>, which is still sung during the seventh-inning stretch at most games. </h3>

	<p>Wiles tried to get inside Norworth&#8217;s head in his book, wondering: &#8220;Did Norworth work any back room deals with Cracker Jack so as to include them in the song? We don&#8217;t know. We do know that Cracker Jack rhymes with &#8216;never get back&#8217; and for songwriters, it&#8217;s all about what rhymes.&#8221;</p>


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     <img src="/assets/2009/04/crackerjackad_160.jpg" onmouseover="preview(1);" onmouseout="preview(0);" class="pdf" />
<p style="font-size:11px;color:#666;margin-top:2px" onmouseover="preview(1);" onmouseout="preview(0);" class="pdf">Enlarge Image<img src="/assets/2009/04/mag_glass.gif" style="vertical-align:middle;"  /></p>
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	<p>The earliest evidence of Cracker Jack being sold at a ballgame is in 1896, says Wiles. It was shown in an ad on a scorecard (pictured) for a game hosted by the Atlantic City Base Ball Club against the Cuban Giants. Cracker Jack was first sold at a Major League ballpark in 1907. So it already had a presence at games, and Norworth cemented that by including it in his song.</p>


	<p>The confection was first introduced by F. W. Rueckheim in 1893 at the World&#8217;s Columbian Exposition in Chicago. Three years later, Rueckheim&#8217;s brother Louis tweaked the recipe, finding a way to keep the molasses-coated popcorn morsels from sticking together. &#8220;He showed it to a salesman who exclaimed, &#8216;That&#8217;s crackerjack!&#8217; and that&#8217;s where the name comes from,&#8221; says Chris Kuechenmeister, director of public relations for Frito-Lay, which now owns Cracker Jack. (At the time, the term <em>crackerjack</em> was used colloquially to mean &#8220;something that is exceptionally fine or splendid&#8221; or &#8220;a person who is exceptionally skillful or expert,&#8221; according to the <em>Oxford English Dictionary.</em>) Prizes were added in 1912, and in 1914, the first baseball-themed prizes appeared: baseball cards in each box.</p>


	<p><em>Image courtesy of National Baseball Hall of Fame Library</em></p>


<div id="preview"><img src="/assets/2009/04/crackerjackad_480.jpg" alt="" /></div>

<p class="author_bio_new"> 
CHOW&#8217;s <a class="red" href="http://www.chow.com/stories/62/category">Nagging Question</a> column appears every Friday. Got a Nagging Question of your own? <a href="mailto:naggingquestion@chow.com">Email us</a>.</p>]]>
      </content>
    </page>
  </pages>
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      <name>ball park</name>
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      <name>popcorn</name>
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      <id>318</id>
      <name>snack</name>
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      <id>27838</id>
      <name>home run</name>
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    <tag>
      <id>8702</id>
      <name>sports</name>
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    <tag>
      <id>6637</id>
      <name>concessions</name>
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