Kool Aid Dills (Local Snack Experience Related)

faux_rillzfaux_rillz 14,343 Posts
edited May 2007 in Strut Central
A Sweet So Sour: Kool-Aid Dills[/b] By JOHN T. EDGEPublished: May 9, 2007Greenville, Miss.Those pickles were once mere dills. They were once green. Their exteriors remain pebbly, a reminder that long ago they began their lives on a farm, on the ground, as cucumbers. But they now have an arresting color that combines green and garnet, and a bracing sour-sweet taste that they owe to a long marinade in cherry or tropical fruit or strawberry Kool-Aid. Kool-Aid pickles violate tradition, maybe even propriety. Depending on your palate and perspective, they are either the worst thing to happen to pickles since plastic brining barrels or a brave new taste sensation to be celebrated. The pickles have been spotted as far afield as Dallas and St. Louis, but their cult is thickest in the Delta region, among the black majority population. In the Delta, where they fetch between 50 cents and a dollar, Kool-Aid pickles have earned valued space next to such beloved snacks as pickled eggs and pigs??? feet at community fairs, convenience stores and filling stations. And as their appeal has widened, some people have seen a good business opportunity. Even the lawyers have gotten involved.Children are the primary consumers, but a recent trip through the region revealed that the market for Kool-Aid pickles is maturing.At Carver Upper Elementary School in Indianola, students in Jodi Sumner???s third-grade class have no reservations about the propriety of cucumbers flavored with vinegar and drink mix. When this writer, lugging a jar of tropical-fruit-flavored pickles, recently asked the 29 students who liked to eat Kool-Aid pickles, 29 hands shot up. The names came fast: Ladarius, Fredericka and Kobreana, among others. So did the impressions: ???It???s a candy pickle.??? And ???I like it the same as dipping hot Cheetos in ice cream.??? And ???Have you ever tried one with a watermelon Blow Pop???? followed by a pantomime of how the Blow Pop stick can be inserted so that the candy appears as a knob at one end of the pickle, allowing the eater to alternate between bites of sour-sweet pickle and licks of sweet-sour Blow Pop. Nobody knows just who first decided that pickles would be improved by a bath in sugared drink mix, or when, but the invention seems to be of fairly recent provenance. Typically, Kool-Aid pickle fans were born some time after Bill Clinton moved into the White House.Billie Williams, 56, a special-education teacher at Carver Elementary, never saw one when she was a child. But she did eat dill pickles impaled on peppermint sticks, and she remembers how friends sucked the juice from cut lemons through peppermint sticks repurposed as straws. ???That???s the same kind of taste,??? she said. ???Same as how they used to dip pickle spears in dry Kool-Aid mix for that pucker.??? The school sells Kool-Aid pickles from the popular red flavor family at its fund-raisers. ???They???re easy to make a gallon,??? Ms. Williams said. ???You pull the pickles from the jar, cut them in halves, make double-strength Kool-Aid, add a pound of sugar, shake and let it sit ??? best in the refrigerator ??? for about a week. The taste takes to anything. A while back I made a mistake and bought a jar of pickle chips instead of halves or wholes. Came out fine. This whole Kool-Aid pickle thing is going so good, you wonder why somebody hasn???t put a patent on them.??? No patent application has been filed, but the name Kool-Aid is a trademark owned by Kraft Foods. Upon learning of the pickles, Bridget MacConnell, a senior manager of corporate affairs at Kraft, recovered, and then pronounced, ???We endorse our consumers??? finding innovative ways to use our products.??? Most of the children at Carver ??? perhaps most of the children in the Delta ??? buy their Kool-Aid pickles from unlicensed house stores, operated by neighborhood elders who, seated at their kitchen tables, sell snacks and chips and candy to anyone who comes knocking. (If these folks sold whiskey instead of pickles, their enterprises would be known as shot houses.) Ms. Sumner???s students praised in particular ???the lady on Quick Circle whose dogs bark when you walk up??? and ???the woman who stays on Slim Street who sells nachos, too.??? At the Stephensville Mini-Mart, set amid the cotton fields and catfish ponds between Shaw and Indianola, the owner, Hugh Davis, began stocking Kool-Aid pickles earlier this year at the behest of local children. ???They???re not for me,??? said Mr. Davis, 66. ???It???s the kids who???ve done it. They???ll create a line of food for you; they???ll dab a little something here and there and make it their own. They???re good at inventing.??? Recently, some Delta grocers began selling jars of ready-made pickles. And entrepreneurs are emerging. At Lambard???s Wholesale Meats in Cleveland, Allen Williams sells plastic gallon jugs of Best Maid dills, plastered with the Kool-Aid packs that denote the flavor within. (Mr. Williams declined to reveal who actually makes his Kool-Aid pickles.) Across town at Eastend Grocery, Beverly and Claud Boddie stand behind their products. They have honed proprietary recipes for green and red flavors that involve piercing the pickles with a fork and stirring together multiple Kool-Aid flavors to achieve maximum pucker. Ms. Boddie, 37, wants to apply for a trademark as ???soon as I can raise some money and settle on a name.??? She???d better get a move on. Double Quick, the Indianola-based chain of more than 30 Delta convenience stores (famous in some circles for a singing group, the Double Quick Gospel Choir, composed of store managers and supervisors), has begun pursuing a trademark for Koolickle, a name coined by Rick Beuning, its director of food service. ???I???m a white boy from the Midwest,??? said Mr. Beuning, 53. ???This isn???t my food, but I know a good product when I see one.???

  Comments


  • DB_CooperDB_Cooper Manhatin' 7,823 Posts
    Kool-Aid pickles have earned valued space next to such beloved snacks as pickled eggs and pigs??? feet at community fairs, convenience stores and filling stations. [/b]

    I think this really says it all.

  • PonyPony 2,283 Posts
    Where's them "Grape Drink" pickles at?

    These look horrible btw.

  • PonyPony 2,283 Posts
    Here's another LSE if you hate your body...


  • hogginthefogghogginthefogg 6,098 Posts
    Back when I lived in Texas, I was shocked to learn of a corner store treat that was part of the Local Black Experience. You take a bite out of a big pickle, then jam a peppermint stick down into it.

    The Kool-Aid Dillz (PAWS) is on par with that.

  • coselmedcoselmed 1,114 Posts
    Back when I lived in Texas, I was shocked to learn of a corner store treat that was part of the Local Black Experience. You take a bite out of a big pickle, then jam a peppermint stick down into it.

    The Kool-Aid Dillz (PAWS) is on par with that.

    Billie Williams, 56, a special-education teacher at Carver Elementary, never saw one when she was a child. But she did eat dill pickles impaled on peppermint sticks,[/b] and she remembers how friends sucked the juice from cut lemons through peppermint sticks repurposed as straws.

  • faux_rillzfaux_rillz 14,343 Posts
    Back when I lived in Texas, I was shocked to learn of a corner store treat that was part of the Local Black Experience. You take a bite out of a big pickle, then jam a peppermint stick down into it.

    The Kool-Aid Dillz (PAWS) is on par with that.

    Billie Williams, 56, a special-education teacher at Carver Elementary, never saw one when she was a child. But she did eat dill pickles impaled on peppermint sticks, and she remembers how friends sucked the juice from cut lemons through peppermint sticks repurposed as straws. ???That???s the same kind of taste,??? she said. ???Same as how they used to dip pickle spears in dry Kool-Aid mix for that pucker.???

  • PonyPony 2,283 Posts
    WTF is a peppermint stick?


  • DB_CooperDB_Cooper Manhatin' 7,823 Posts
    I would also like to nominate this:

    ???I like it the same as dipping hot Cheetos in ice cream.???[/b]

    for gold status, and this:

    Ms. Sumner???s students praised in particular ???the lady on Quick Circle whose dogs bark when you walk up??? and ???the woman who stays on Slim Street who sells nachos, too.???
    [/b]

    as top-notch journalism. You just can't teach that.



    Or at least, they didn't teach me that in Journalism school. You know, the one down the way a piece with the creaky stairs and the flatulent cat? Yeah, that one.

  • coselmedcoselmed 1,114 Posts
    Back when I lived in Texas, I was shocked to learn of a corner store treat that was part of the Local Black Experience. You take a bite out of a big pickle, then jam a peppermint stick down into it.

    The Kool-Aid Dillz (PAWS) is on par with that.

    Billie Williams, 56, a special-education teacher at Carver Elementary, never saw one when she was a child. But she did eat dill pickles impaled on peppermint sticks, and she remembers how friends sucked the juice from cut lemons through peppermint sticks repurposed as straws. ???That???s the same kind of taste,??? she said. ???Same as how they used to dip pickle spears in dry Kool-Aid mix for that pucker.???

    You should delete this--it looks like we're ganging up on poor R*ss!

  • DB_CooperDB_Cooper Manhatin' 7,823 Posts
    WTF is a peppermint stick?




    It's like a candy cane, but straight. ?

  • faux_rillzfaux_rillz 14,343 Posts
    Or at least, they didn't teach me that in Journalism school. You know, the one down the way a piece with the creaky stairs and the flatulent cat? Yeah, that one.

    I guess it's fair to say that you didn't go to the same J-school as our own Rashied Gabriel. And you probably wouldn't know where the best schrooms could be found or what the number of the girl down the road is.

  • SyminSymin 999 Posts
    Where's them "Grape Drink" pickles at?

    i tried the purple stuff pickles, right next to the sunny D pickles.
    i gotta get me some grape drink pickles now.

  • faux_rillzfaux_rillz 14,343 Posts
    Back when I lived in Texas, I was shocked to learn of a corner store treat that was part of the Local Black Experience. You take a bite out of a big pickle, then jam a peppermint stick down into it.

    The Kool-Aid Dillz (PAWS) is on par with that.

    Billie Williams, 56, a special-education teacher at Carver Elementary, never saw one when she was a child. But she did eat dill pickles impaled on peppermint sticks, and she remembers how friends sucked the juice from cut lemons through peppermint sticks repurposed as straws. ???That???s the same kind of taste,??? she said. ???Same as how they used to dip pickle spears in dry Kool-Aid mix for that pucker.???

    You should delete this--it looks like we're ganging up on poor R*ss!

    He will think twice about presuming to speak on the local peppermint and pickle experience next time.

  • hogginthefogghogginthefogg 6,098 Posts
    Back when I lived in Texas, I was shocked to learn of a corner store treat that was part of the Local Black Experience. You take a bite out of a big pickle, then jam a peppermint stick down into it.

    The Kool-Aid Dillz (PAWS) is on par with that.

    Billie Williams, 56, a special-education teacher at Carver Elementary, never saw one when she was a child. But she did eat dill pickles impaled on peppermint sticks, and she remembers how friends sucked the juice from cut lemons through peppermint sticks repurposed as straws. ???That???s the same kind of taste,??? she said. ???Same as how they used to dip pickle spears in dry Kool-Aid mix for that pucker.???

    You should delete this--it looks like we're ganging up on poor R*ss!

    He will think twice about presuming to speak on the local peppermint and pickle experience next time.


    M O D E D.

    I will admit to not having read the entire article. I'm trying to eat here at my desk and the thought of Kool Aid Pickles was not helping matters.

  • DB_CooperDB_Cooper Manhatin' 7,823 Posts
    Or at least, they didn't teach me that in Journalism school. You know, the one down the way a piece with the creaky stairs and the flatulent cat? Yeah, that one.

    I guess it's fair to say that you didn't go to the same J-school as our own Rashied Gabriel. And you probably wouldn't know where the best schrooms could be found or what the number of the girl down the road is.

    Now I feel I've thrown my money and four years of my life away.

  • PABLOPABLO 1,921 Posts
    Wow just what the youth needs, a product that can help them take a step towards hypertension I>and/I> diabetes in one convenient snack!
    ...and it's a vegetable!
    Outstanding.

  • ReynaldoReynaldo 6,054 Posts
    Kool-Aid pigs??? feet[/b]

  • rootlesscosmorootlesscosmo 12,848 Posts
    peppermint pigs??? feet[/b]

  • rootlesscosmorootlesscosmo 12,848 Posts
    deep fried peppermint kool aid[/b]

  • SyminSymin 999 Posts
    pickled peppermint[/b]

  • rootlesscosmorootlesscosmo 12,848 Posts
    deep pig kool peppermint fried feet aid[/b]

  • rootlesscosmorootlesscosmo 12,848 Posts
    Kool's dipped in pickled kool aid[/b]







    no it's not.

  • Young_PhonicsYoung_Phonics 8,039 Posts
    Wow just what the youth needs, a product that can help them take a step towards hypertension I>and/I> diabetes in one convenient snack!
    ...and it's a vegetable!
    Outstanding.

    YOU SOUND WHITE!

  • coselmedcoselmed 1,114 Posts
    Playing a joke on your parents on the radio = not funny

    Gratuitously perpetuating stereotypes about the Local Black Snack Experience = hella amusing

  • rootlesscosmorootlesscosmo 12,848 Posts
    I guess neither one is all that funny. I got carried away by coming up with new and exciting taste treats using the words "Kool" "pickled" and "pigs feet." and then I begain musing on the robitussun-infused cigarettes I smoked in high school and my mind wandered...those things prolly took a few years off my life.

    hey cosolmed you read this or this or this ? all in one day. NY times has it in for you guys right now what's the deal?

  • coselmedcoselmed 1,114 Posts


    hey cosolmed you read this or this or this ? all in one day. NY times has it in for you guys right now what's the deal?

    You're in law school aren't you? Sometimes it's cheaper to settle and avoid jailtime, and not just in pharmaceutical cases.

    I hate the Times coverage of the drug industry; it's very sensational. The Wall Street Journal is more balanced, and the doctors they interview are a lot more credible. Painkillers are big money--the article pointed out how much OxyContin made for Purdue before it went off patent, and they continue to make money off the generic. It's not the first time that company has paid a big settlement, either. This one is only particularly newsworthy because of the amount, but a few years ago, one of the pharmaceutical companies paid almost $900 million to settle for paying kickbacks to doctors...And you wonder why drugs cost so much (I'm totally kidding)? Also, we've been hearing for some time that BMS is going to be acquired by a bigger company (probably sanofi-aventis), so they probably don't give a shit about paying settlements right now.

  • yuichiyuichi Urban sprawl 11,331 Posts
    hey cosolmed you read this or this or this ? all in one day. NY times has it in for you guys right now what's the deal?

    That is very depressing stuff to read about. Doctors should be the last people that should be motivated by money, but yet there seems to be far too many in the industry that got in for the money. It's upsetting if you really think about it.

  • rootlesscosmorootlesscosmo 12,848 Posts
    The Wall Street Journal is more balanced

    honestly I find this to be true for most of their news coverage. I recently read a quote by Noam Chomsky (!) to the effect that the WSJ is the most serious paper in the US.

    Leaving aside the editorial page (which is unabashedly supply-side, but at least intellectually consistent), the Journal's actual news[/b] coverage (of US business stuff but more importantly of world events) is the most in-depth and non-partisan of any other major paper.
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