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Baby Ruth is an American made of , , and milk chocolate-flavored , covered in compound chocolate. Created in 1920, it is manufactured by the Ferrara Candy Company, a subsidiary of .


History
In 1920, the Curtiss Candy Company refashioned its Kandy Kake into the Baby Ruth, and it became the best-selling confection in the five-cent confectionery category by the late 1920s.
(2025). 9780199885763, Oxford University Press. .
(2025). 9780374711108, Farrar, Straus and Giroux. .
(2025). 9780313393938, ABC-CLIO. .
The bar was a staple of the -based company for more than six decades.

Curtiss was purchased by in 1981. In 1990, sold the Curtiss brands to Nestlé. Ferrero acquired Nestlé USA's confectionery brands, including Baby Ruth, in 2018. Ferrero folded production of the acquired brands into the Ferrara Candy Company.

Ferrara relaunched Baby Ruth in December 2019. The new recipe includes dry-roasted peanuts grown in the United States, whereas previous versions contained peanuts roasted in oil. It also removed the food preservative TBHQ.


Etymology
Although the name of the candy bar sounds like the name of the famous player , the Curtiss Candy Company claimed that it was named after President 's daughter, . The candy maker, located on the same street as , named the bar "Baby Ruth" in 1921, as Babe Ruth's fame was on the rise, 24 years after Cleveland had left the , and 17 years after his daughter, Ruth, had died. The company did not negotiate an endorsement deal with Ruth, and many saw the company's story about the origin of the name to be a way to avoid having to pay the baseball player any . In a trademark appeal, Curtiss successfully shut down a rival bar that was approved by, and named for, Ruth, on the grounds that the names were too similar.

In the trivia book series Imponderables, David Feldman reports the standard story about the bar being named for Grover Cleveland's daughter, with additional information that ties it to the President: "The trademark was patterned exactly after the engraved lettering of the name used on a medallion struck for the Chicago World's Columbian Exposition in 1893 and picturing the President, his wife, and daughter Baby Ruth." However, this may have been an after-the-fact covering maneuver.Feldman, David. What Are Hyenas Laughing At, Anyway? (1995), p. 84. Feldman also cites More Misinformation, by Tom Burnam: "Burnam concluded that the candy bar was named ... after the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Williamson, candy makers who developed the original formula and sold it to Curtiss." (Williamson had also sold the "Oh Henry!" formula to Curtiss around that time.) The write-up goes on to note that marketing the product as being named for a company executive's granddaughter would likely have been less successful, hence their "official" story.Feldman, David. How Do Astronauts Scratch an Itch? (1996), pp. 288–289.

However, David Mikkelson of denies the claim that the Williamsons invented the recipe, as George Williamson was head of the Williamson Candy Company, producers of the Oh Henry! bar. He continues to say that "the Baby Ruth bar came about when Otto Schnering, founder of the Curtiss Candy Company, made some alterations to his company's first candy offering, a confection known as 'Kandy Kake.Feldman, David. Do Elephants Jump? (2004), pp. 264–265.


Marketing
To promote the candy, company founder Otto Schnering chartered a plane in 1923 to drop thousands of Baby Ruth bars, each with its own miniature parachute, over the city of . Thereafter, Schnering performed the parachute drops in various cities in over forty states.

In 1929, the Curtiss Candy Company sponsored The Baby Ruth Hour, a program.

As if to tweak their own official denial of the name's origin, after Babe Ruth's "called shot" at Chicago's in the 1932 , Curtiss installed an illuminated advertising sign for Baby Ruth on the roof of one of the flats across Sheffield Avenue, near where Ruth's home run ball had landed in center field.

(2025). 9781612344119, Potomac Books. .
The sign stood for some four decades before being removed.
(2025). 9780760332467, MVP Books. .

In 1985, Nabisco paid $100,000 for the product placement of Baby Ruth to appear in the film .

(1997). 9780809320820, Southern Illinois University Press. .

In 1992, the company sponsored Bill Davis Racing's NASCAR Busch Grand National Series #1 Ford for future superstar . The following year, the sponsorship moved to 's #8 Ford.

In 1995, a company representing the Ruth estate licensed his name and likeness for use in a Baby Ruth marketing campaign.

On p. 34 of the spring 2007 edition of the game program, there is a full-page ad showing a partially unwrapped Baby Ruth in front of the Wrigley ivy, with the caption, "The official candy bar of major league baseball, and proud sponsor of the Chicago Cubs."

Continuing the baseball-oriented theme, during the summer and post-season of the 2007 season, a TV ad for the candy bar showed an entire stadium (identified as ) filled with people munching Baby Ruths, and thus having to hum rather than singing along with "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" during the seventh-inning stretch.


Ingredients
The original flavor U.S. edition, listed by weight in decreasing order, contains , , , partially hydrogenated and , nonfat , , high-fructose corn syrup and less than 1% of , (from milk), , , , , , , natural and artificial , , TBHQ, (to preserve freshness) and color.
(2025). 9780160755910, U.S. Government Printing Office. .

Current ingredients used by Ferrero: (in descending order) sugar, dry roasted peanuts, corn syrup, hydrogenated vegetable oil (palm kernel, coconut, and soybean), nonfat milk, cocoa, less than 2% high fructose corn syrup, dairy product solids, glycerin, dextrose, salt, soy lecithin, lactic acid esters, carrageenan.


Sizes
In addition to the single 1.9 ounce (53.8-gram) bar (sold in packages as Full Size), Baby Ruth is also sold in a (King Size), a 3.3-ounce (93.5 g) Share Pack (two pieces), and in packages of Fun Size and Miniatures.
(2025). 9781583331118, Avery. .


Related products
Nestlé produces a Baby Ruth with a milk chocolate coating, -covered peanuts, and a -and- flavored center.
(2025). 9781623493639, Texas A&M University Press. .
Nestlé also produces Baby Ruth Crisp bars, which are chocolate-covered wafer , with a caramel-flavored cream and crushed peanuts. This is part of a line of Nestlé products under the Crisp name, including Nestlé Crunch Crisp and Crisp.


In popular culture
A popular 1956 song, "A Rose and a Baby Ruth", was written by John D. Loudermilk and recorded by George Hamilton IV.
(2025). 9780786474615, McFarland. .

In a 1960 episode of Leave It to Beaver, Beaver and his friends lose an old autographed baseball belonging to Beaver's father. They find another ball and try to fake the signatures. One they add is "Baby Ruth".

In the 1979 Taxi episode "Louie and the Nice Girl", Louie De Palma () brags about getting the first Baby Ruth out of the vending machine after Zena () restocks it.

The Baby Ruth bar is infamously featured in a scene in the 1980 movie that takes place at a pool party, in which the bar is mistaken for human .

(2025). 9781932595215, Feral House. .

Baby Ruth was used in the 1985 American film

(2025). 9780806523194, Citadel Press. .
by Chunk to befriend Sloth.

In the 1985 novelization by Richard Mueller, Egon Spengler frequently is said to be eating Baby Ruth candy bars.

In the 1998 film both Max and Kevin are awarded Baby Ruth bars for taking care of a problem in a local store.

In a 2002 episode of , "The Great Louse Detective", Bart Simpson pranks people at a luxury spa by floating a Baby Ruth down a mineral bath.

In the 2004 film Hellboy, a Baby Ruth bar is used to lure and mollify the infant Hellboy when he is discovered after the destruction of the Nazi portal.

In the 2005 film Four Brothers, Angel Mercer (played by ) offers to give a local kid playing baseball an entire box of Baby Ruth bars if he helps Angel by creating a distraction so Angel can ambush a dirty cop at his home.

A "Baby Ruth" candy bar appears in the 2006 episode "Hell Comes to Quahog" when Meg feeds Sloth from the 1985 film .

In the television series , Rachel Green (played by ) and Ross Geller (played by ) are discussing baby names, almost settling on the name Ruth until Rachel excitedly says "Yes! We're having a little baby Ruth..." and they realize the obvious brand recognition joke.


See also


Further reading


External links

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