HomeBiography & MemoirsFritos® Pie: Stories, Recipes, and More (Volume 24) (Tarleton State University Southwestern Studies in the Humanities)
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Fritos® Pie: Stories, Recipes, and More (Volume 24) (Tarleton State University Southwestern Studies in the Humanities)

paperbackJuly 21, 2011
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ISBN-13: 9781603442565 ISBN-10: 1603442561
Publisher
Texas A&M University Press
Binding
paperback
Published
July 21, 2011
Weight
1.3 lbs
Dimensions
24.10×1.30×15.90 cm

About this book

Fritos® Pie: Stories, Recipes, and More (Volume 24) (Tarleton State University Southwestern Studies in the Humanities) by Doolin, Kaleta. paperback edition. ISBN: 9781603442565.

Fritos® Pie is an insider’s look at the never-before-told story of the Frito Company written by Kaleta Doolin, daughter of the company’s founder. Filled with personal anecdotes, more than 150 vintage and newly created recipes, and stories, this book recounts the company’s early days, the 1961 merger that created Frito-Lay, Inc., and beyond. In 1932 C. E. Doolin, the operator of a struggling San Antonio confectionery, purchased for $100 the recipe for a fried corn chip product and a crude device used to make it, along with a list of nineteen customer accounts. From that humble beginning sprang Fritos® (“fries” in Spanish), a product that, thanks to Doolin’s marketing ingenuity and a visionary approach to food technology, would become one of the best-known brands in America. One of the first firms to utilize point-of-sale advertising, the Frito Company developed dozens of recipes intended to get American homemakers “Cooking with Fritos.” Indeed, Doolin shows that many of the vintage recipes developed by her grandmother, her father, and company employees became integral to the company’s marketing success. The book includes recipes—for everything from appetizers to desserts, all using Fritos as an ingredient—along with the author’s comments and anecdotes about her adventures experimenting with them in her kitchen. Doolin also draws upon hours of interviews with her mother, siblings, cousins, and many of her fathers closest business associates as well as focused research in Frito-Lay corporate archives and other collections to paint a portrait of her father as not only an innovator in food marketing but also a visionary inventor, a forward-thinking agriculturalist, and an entrepreneur with an amazing grasp of detail.