THE ACCIDENTAL TAFFY
Legend has it that Salt Water Taffy received its name by accident. A young
candy merchant, opened a taffy stand on the first Atlantic City Boardwalk -
then just two steps above sea level. One night a generous tide brought in a
lively surf which sprayed sea foam over his establishment and dampened his
stock of candy. The next morning, the merchant was dismayed to find his
merchandise wet and responded to a girl's request for taffy with a sarcastic
but witty, "you mean Salt Water Taffy." The name, stuck!
FROM FISH MERCHANT TO CANDY MAKER
At the same time Joseph Fralinger, a former glassblower and fish merchant,
opened a retail store on the Boardwalk. Within a year, Fralinger had added
a taffy concession and spent the winter perfecting the Salt Water Taffy
formula, first using molasses, then chocolate and vanilla, eventually reaching
25 flavors
As Fralinger's grew to six locations, he decided that Salt Water Taffy should
return home with resort visitors. Using experience from his fish merchant
days, he packed one pound oyster boxes with Salt Water Taffy, making it
the first "Atlantic City Souvenir." The one pound box still remains the
most popular souvenir almost 125 years later. By 1899 Salt Water Taffy had
become a household word across America!
PULLING THE HISTORY TOGETHER
Meanwhile, confectioner Enoch James and his sons claim to have been making
Salt Water Taffy before they introduced it on the Atlantic City Boardwalk
in the 1880's. After many years of working for large candy companies throughout
the country, Mr. James brought his family to Atlantic City to sell their
"original" Salt Water Taffy.
Enoch James developed a high quality recipe that would not pull out one's
teeth. He also eliminated the stickiness that made the taffy and its wrapper
inseparable. The result was a smooth, rich, wholesome taffy available in
a variety of flavors and a new "Cut-to-fit-the-mouth" shape. The James'
product line soon extended to chocolate dipped Salt Water Taffy, filled
centers, chocolate taffy pops, macaroons and boardwalk fudge. Enoch James'
packaged his confections in seashore novelties such as the "barrel" and
"satchel" that are still popular today.
COOK, PULL, CUT AND WRAP -
MAKING SALT WATER TAFFY!
In the 1880's, Salt Water Taffy was cooked in copper kettles over open coal
fires, cooled on marble slabs, and pulled on a large hook on the wall. Pulling
the taffy was designed to add air to the corn syrup and sugar confection.
By draping 10 to 25 pounds of cooled taffy over the hook and then pulling
it away from the hook, the taffy stretched. When the taffy reached five
or six feet in length, the puller looped the taffy back over the hook, folding
it onto itself and trapping air between the two lengths.
An accomplished taffy puller would work quickly and listen for the familiar
swish sound, then the smack or slap sound of the two lengths as they joined
as one. This process of aeration helped to keep the taffy soft and prevented
stickiness. The pulled taffy was then shaped by hand rolling it on a marble
or wooden table into ¼ inch diameter snake. It was then cut to the proper
length with scissors. And finally, the taffy was wrapped in a pre-cut piece
of paper with a twist at both ends. All of this was done by hand and usually
within the sight of Boardwalk strollers who were eager for entertainment.
By 1907, the James' family had updated the manufacturing process to include
taffy wrapping machines, the first candy pulling machines, electric tempering
ovens, and vacuum cooking kettles. These machines made great strides for
the taffy manufacturing process and are the basis of how taffy is still
made today.
THE MOST FAMOUS NAMES IN SALT WATER TAFFY
Whoever was the originator of Salt Water Taffy, Enoch James' and Joseph
Fralinger's original recipes and excellence in candy making have been preserved
through the sands of time. Although Salt Water Taffy may have gotten its
name by "accident," the millions who enjoy Salt Water Taffy from James'
and Fralinger's, can attest that our quality is no accident!
We still make all of our candy the old-fashioned way using the original
recipes and finest ingredients. As a fifth generation family-owned business,
we're proud to continue the candy making tradition began by James' and Fralinger's.
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