Postum Explained

Postum
Producttype:Roasted grain beverage
Currentowner:Post Holdings
Country:U.S.
Introduced:[1]

Postum is a powdered roasted grain beverage popular as a coffee substitute. The caffeine-free beverage was created by Post Cereal Company founder C. W. Post in 1895 and marketed as a healthier alternative to coffee. Post was a student of John Harvey Kellogg, who believed that caffeine was unhealthy. Post Cereal Company eventually became General Foods, then merged to Kraft Foods Inc. in 1990. Eliza's Quest Foods now owns the trademark rights and secret recipe of Postum.

The "instant" drink mix version was developed in 1912, replacing the original brewed beverage. Postum is made from roasted wheat bran and molasses. In addition to the original flavor, coffee-flavored and cocoa-flavored versions have been introduced.

Acrylamide

When tested by the FDA, Postum had more acrylamide than any other product, by dry weight.[2] [3]

History

Postum quickly became popular, making Post wealthy. The aggressive advertising, with the slogan "There's a Reason", warned against the alleged dangers of coffee and caffeine, and promoted the benefits of Postum. When imitations appeared, the company introduced a cheaper drink called Monk's Brew that was identical to Postum, but discontinued it after competitors left the market. Instant Postum appeared in 1911. A 1912 advertisement for Instant Postum is the earliest known use of the word “instant” to refer to a processed food that can be prepared immediately.

Although the Post Cereal Company explicitly stated in its advertising that Postum did not taste like coffee and was not a coffee substitute,[4] the drink enjoyed an enormous rise in sales and popularity in the United States during World War II when coffee was rationed and people sought a replacement.[5]

Postum was sometimes marketed by a cartoon ghost named Mister Coffee Nerves, who would appear in situations wherein people were shown in uncomfortable life situations (e.g., irritability, lack of sleep, lack of athletic prowess) due to their use of coffee and its negative effects. These cartoons always ended with the afflicted people switching to Postum and Mister Coffee Nerves fleeing until the next cartoon.[6] The company sponsored the radio shows Lum and Abner, Beulah and The Aldrich Family, and the radio version of Father Knows Best.

Postum was popular with members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and part of Mormon culture for many years because Mormons abstain from coffee. It was also popular with those following religious dietary restrictions of Seventh-day Adventists.

The US government used Postum as a code name for polonium,[7] used in the Urchin-style nuclear weapon initiators.

Kraft discontinued production of Postum in 2007.[8] In May 2012, Kraft sold the Postum trademark and trade secret to Eliza's Quest Food, with Postum sold through Postum.com. As of January 2013, Eliza's Quest Food succeeded in returning Postum to many grocery stores across the United States and Canada.

See also

In popular culture

In "All by Herself", episode 14 of season 5 of The Facts of Life, Mrs. Garrett offers the girls a nice, piping hot cup of Postum.

In "The Pez Dispenser", episode 14 of season 3 of Seinfeld, George and Jerry briefly discuss how Postum is underrated as a drink.

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://postum.com/our-roots/ Our roots
  2. News: FDA produces most extensive list of acrylamide content in foods . 17 January 2024 . foodnavigator.com . 7 August 2006.
  3. Web site: FDA-Measured Acrylamide Levels . OEHHA . https://web.archive.org/web/20120208032632/http://www.oehha.ca.gov/prop65/acrylamideintakefdaappendix.pdf . 2012-02-08.
  4. Now, how did I ever get that idea? . 1942-11-23 . . November 22, 2011 . 73 . advertisement.
  5. Book: Pendergrast, Mark . Uncommon Grounds: The History of Coffee and How It Transformed Our World . Mark Pendergrast . New York City . . 2010 . 2001 . Rev. . 9780465018369 . 609871227 .
  6. Web site: James . Lileks . The Adventures of Mr. Coffee Nerves . Lileks.com . 2008-03-01.
  7. http://www.fas.org/blog/secrecy/2006/12/injecting_polonium_into_humans.html Injecting Polonium into Humans
  8. News: Taashi . Rowe . Goodbye to Postum . . January 16, 2008 . 2014-07-20 .