What was the first instant coffee?
Nescafe, developed by the Nestle Company and introduced in Switzerland in 1938 was the first instant coffee.
It had taken eight years to develop.
Nescafe, developed by the Nestle Company and introduced in Switzerland in 1938 was the first instant coffee.
It had taken eight years to develop.
Chanel Number 5 got its name not because it was the fifth formulation of the perfume mixture. Coco Chanel considered five a lucky number, and when she introduced the perfume in 1921, she did so on the fifth day of May, the fifth month. She called the fragrance Chanel N°5.
Henry Shrapnel of England (1761-1842), an artillery officer, invented the so-called shrapnel. It was a round projectile filled with bullets and equipped with an explosive charge to scatter the shot. In later versions, fragments of the shell casing itself were found to be more deadly than the enclosed bullets. Shrapnel today refers to those fragments.
No, the Gerber baby is not a painting of the young Humphrey Bogart. The now famous portrait was of a baby girl named Ann Turner and was sketched by artist Dorothy Hope Smith in 1928.
The word fiat means an authoritative decree, from the Latin for “let it be done”. But the Italian car company founded in Turin in 1899 adopted its name as an acronym for Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino (Italian Motorcar Works, Turin).
Originally San Francisco tailor Levi Strauss made jeans from canvas. But in the early 1860s, he started using a softer fabric imported from Nimes, France. Known in French as serge de Nimes, the material was called denim in the United States.
Following consumer testing, M&M/Mars decided upon the following breakdown for plain M&M’s in each bag: Brown. 30 percent Red. 20 percent Yellow. 20 percent Green. 10 percent Orange. 10 percent Tan. 10 percent For peanut M&M’s, it is: Brown. 30 percent Red. 20 percent Yellow. 20 percent Green. 20 percent Orange. 10 percent