Junior Mints

Junior Mints are a candy consisting of small rounds of mint filling inside a dark chocolate coating. Currently produced by Tootsie Roll Industries, the product is packaged in varying amounts from the fun-size box to the much larger 12.0 oz. box.

Junior Mints were introduced in 1949 by the Cambridge, Massachusetts-based James O. Welch Company, manufacturers of candies and candy bars such as Sugar Babies, Welch's Fudge, and Pom Poms. Born in Hertford, North Carolina, Welch attended the University of North Carolina and then founded his Cambridge candy company in 1927. His partner in the company was his brother, Robert W. Welch, Jr., who retired from the confectionery business in 1956 and two years later founded the John Birch Society.[1]

Contents

Origin of product name

The name of the product is a pun on Sally Benson's Junior Miss, a collection of her stories from The New Yorker, which were adapted by Jerome Chodorov and Joseph Fields into a successful play. Directed by Moss Hart, Junior Miss ran on Broadway from 1941 to 1943. According to one past official company history, when James Welch developed and launched the product in 1949, he named the candy after his favorite Broadway show. Yet the candy came six years after the play had closed on Broadway. Current copy on the Junior Mints box incorrectly gives the date of the Broadway play as 1949.[2][3]

In 1945, the play was adapted to film, with George Seaton directing Peggy Ann Garner in the lead role. The Junior Miss radio series, starring Barbara Whiting, was being broadcast weekly on CBS at the time Junior Mints were first marketed in 1949. Thus, Welch had cleverly created a product sold at movie theater concession stands and identified with a specific movie and radio series and displaying a name that sounded almost exactly like that property–yet different enough that it avoided any fees for licensing and merchandising. Junior Mints quickly became a popular candy at movie concession stands, and one product in the line is the three oz. box marketed as the "Theater Size Junior Mints Concession Candy".

In 1963, the brand was acquired by Nabisco, who sold the brand to Warner-Lambert Company (now part of Pfizer) in 1988, who in turn sold the brand to Tootsie Roll in 1993. Today, Junior Mints are still manufactured in Cambridge at Tootsie Roll Industries.

Today

Over 15 million Junior Mints are produced daily. Tootsie Roll also makes Junior Caramels (caramel filling with a milk chocolate coating) and limited edition "Inside Outs" (mint-chocolate filling with a white chocolate shell). Other limited edition Junior Mints include Valentine's Day Pastels/Valentine's Day Regulars (not pastel), Easter Pastels, Senior Mints, Christmas edition (featuring red and green fillings), and Christmas Peppermint Crunch edition (featuring crunchy peppermint flakes in the outer chocolate coating). Junior Mints are sold in various amounts from the fun-size boxes to the movie theater-size boxes, since the product continues to sell well in movie theaters. Junior Mints have traveled throughout the world, including Australia's discount department store chain K Mart. Also available in Myer, Supa IGA, IGA, Cornett's, Drakes and Petrol & Convenience stores around the Country. Imported and Marketed in Australia by Confectionery Link Pty Ltd, Melbourne, Victoria. They are now certified kosher dairy by the Orthodox Union.

In popular culture

Music

On the title track of Fruitcakes, an album released in May 1994 by American popular music singer-songwriter Jimmy Buffett, Buffet expresses extreme frustration by the disappearance of Junior Mints from the concession counter of modern cineplex theaters.

The candy is mentioned in the lyrics to the track "Eiffel Tower High" by the American band Hüsker Dü off of their 1986 album, Candy Apple Grey.

The Candy is also mentioned in "cold shower tuesdays" by the American band Bowling For Soup.

Internet, TV and films

Junior Mints were prominently featured in an episode of Seinfeld titled "The Junior Mint". While observing the surgery of Elaine's ex-boyfriend Roy, Kramer offers a Junior Mint to Jerry, who refuses the offer—to which Kramer later states, "Who's gonna turn down a Junior Mint? It's chocolate, it's peppermint; it's delicious!"—and the two accidentally drop it into the retracted abdominal cavity below. After Roy's condition deteriorates, Jerry calls the hospital intending to confess the whole situation, only to discover that Roy's condition has improved. The doctor attributes the miraculous recovery to "something beyond science — something, perhaps, from above."

Junior Mints are also referred to in a season three episode of Two and a Half Men.

In Family Guy episode "We Love You, Conrad", Brian's ex-girlfriend Jillian shows Peter Griffin her iPod, which turns out to be a small box of Junior Mints.

In Knight and Day Tom Cruise says he can dismantle bombs using a safety pin and a Junior Mint when Cameron Diaz asks how she got in to a bikini whilst being unconscious.

Books

The 2006 Augusten Burroughs book Possible Side Effects contains a chapter, "Mint Threshold", about the author's experience creating an advertising campaign for Junior Mints.

In the novel I'd Tell You I Love You, But Then I'd Have to Kill You, the protagonist's friend suggests Junior Mints as the best candy to buy during a date, which is then declared to be the perfect movie candy.

In Fannie Flagg's bestseller Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe (1987), Evelyn brings Junior Mints to share with her friend Mrs. Threadgoode.

In Sarah Dessen's book "Dreamland" Junior Mints are mentioned in Chapter 7 when her boyfriend tells her to "shut up and eat your Junior Mints."

In Michael Grant's book "Hunger", Junior Mints are mentioned several times; most notably when Bug steals them and when they become a part of Sam's dream.

References

External links