Tuesday, May 23, 2023

“The three-ring kind”

Steven Millhauser, “The Sledding Party,” in In the Penny Arcade (1986).

Pretzels turn up here and there in Steven Millhauser’s fiction: rods, sticks, and (elsewhere) three-ringers. I think of them as a marker of mid-century American life, like plaid thermoses and transistor radios. One of the books on Edwin Mullhouse’s bookshelf when he’s two and three: The Little Pretzel Who Had No Salt.

Here is the pretzel form that young Catherine is missing:

[Life, March 8, 1968. Click for a larger, saltier view.]

Raise your hand if you remember when pretzels came in waxed-paper bags enclosed in carboard boxes. Raise your hand if you remember when “salty” was a selling point.

Related reading
All OCA Steven Millhauser posts (Pinboard)

comments: 8

Fresca said...

Saltines!

I agree, straight pretzels--why?

Michael Leddy said...

Saltines! You’re right.

Anonymous said...

http://collections.mohistory.org/resource/846454

Michael Leddy said...

That’s a 1936 display of Rold Gold pretzels, sticks, three-rings, and (I think) longer sticks (not rods). Thanks, reader.

Anonymous said...

more sticks

https://dmr.bsu.edu/digital/collection/WWIIScrp/id/1198

Michael Leddy said...

I think we now have enough pretzels for all.

Anonymous said...

https://bklyn.newspapers.com/article/67294034/

pretzel history

Michael Leddy said...

For anyone reading: the link shows the stick to be a relative newcomer.