Posted on 07/30/2015 9:10:13 AM PDT by nickcarraway
We're in Fairfield, a few minutes away from Travis Air Force base, one of the last few remaining military installations in the Bay Area. We've come through miles of drought-desiccated fields and baked brown hills to visit what's arguably the most conservative place in Northern California: the Jelly Belly candy factory.
This is where right-wingnut Rick Santorum threw a well-attended fundraiser during his short-lived bid for president in 2012. It is easy to understand why he and his Tea Party followers would feel comfortable here. The place is in many ways a Wal-Mart-sized shrine to Ronald Reagan.
You see, without jelly beans, American would not have won the Cold War. Maybe. Probably. Reagan was no doubt a bean addict: He kicked smoking by swapping tobacco pipes for jelly beans. The sugar pellets became such an integral part of his life that, as he told Jelly Belly in a letter of praise written while he was California's governor, Reagan and his advisers could hardly "make a decision without passing around a jar of jelly beans."
We know Reagan carried this habit with him to the White House. Thus, the implication is that hints of licorice and a blast of buttered popcorn rolled around his lips while he denied the existence of AIDS, ramped up the drug war, slashed Great Society social services to ribbons, and watched the Soviet Union implode.
That is quite the legacy.
The Reagan-Jelly Belly love is mutual. You see the first "portrait" of Dutch within seconds of walking through the sliding glass doors. This Reagan is made of jelly beans, of course, as are several other Reagans (at least one including Just Say No Nancy) hung around the factory.
The Jelly Belly factory makes 149 other diabetic nightmares fudge, candy corn, nonpareils in addition to the beans. But this is Sunday; the machines are still. Which leaves only our tour guide, a determinedly energetic young woman, to lead us to a series of TV monitors positioned along a carpeted catwalk above the factory floor, where Jelly Belly's autobiography flashes before us on screens.
We learn that jelly beans became the company's signature product only in 1976, during Reagan's second term as governor, when an outsider a Los Angeles lawyer and jelly bean fan convinced the company's owners, the Goelitz family, to make good jelly beans. Jelly beans with natural flavors. Jelly beans that taste just like their advertised descriptions.
And, by gum, those popcorn beans do taste just like popcorn.
That leads us to the most interesting thing about Jelly Belly: the secrets of its flavor magicians. How do they make them taste so spot-on? You never find out by going on the tour. You do learn how the beans are made. They begin as little balls of sugar before they're baked, rolled, and polished in a series of ovens and tumblers. And you are reminded, time and again, which world leader loved the beans so much.
You can judge a man's character, Reagan supposedly said, by how he consumes his jelly beans: one-by-one, or by the handful. That's on my mind when I sidle up to the tasting bar after the tour ends. Along with the predictable favorites, there are gag flavors: lawn clippings, dirt, vomit. I opt for the first two. Any doubts I had were drowned in the kale-like taste of just-cut grass, and in soil's iron and nitrogen notes. There are geniuses at work here, and their secrets are safe.
We make our exit and head back into the 97-degree heat, bearing several two-pound bags of misshapen, rejected jelly beans "belly flops," they're called which will be consumed within hours the next day back at SF Weekly headquarters.
Like Reagan, jelly beans aren't for everybody. Like Reagan, they could be bad for you. But also like Reagan, they offer a promise. If you close your eyes and roll them around in your mouth, with a little imagination, you can almost convince yourself you're eating the real thing.
Until it's dissolved, and all that's left is the inevitable sugar crash.
There is no cure for the combination of Stupid, Bitterness, and Marxist!
They can't help themselves.
This guy should choke on a jelly bean.
Remember friends, the anti-American and fascist left will always let you know who they fear the most.
The sophomoric digs and petty, bitchiness of the writer reveal more than a too-tight corset.
After all these many years,
RWR is still living in their heads for free.
All Hail Reynaldus Magnus!
The author.
Is the author running out of current day republicans to trash and slander? Has he been forced to dig up these old dry bones again?
What a douche bag.
belly flop!
That’s obviously Al Haig to President Reagan’s right. National Security Advisor Richard Allen is to Haig’s right.
Either that or Lenin or Marx
He looks like a fool... :-)
So Reagan likes a certain sweet confection and all of the sudden it is like what defines him... this is okay for liberals, then FINE....
Obama is the arugula president.... He is a green leafy mess that tastes like crap no matter how much salad dressing by the media is poured over his administration...
[ This ‘journalist’ is bitter... I guess JellyBelly is a private enterprise which this ‘journalist’ hates and he hates Reagan. The guy should visit a liberal company...maybe they’ll have Obama in the lobby. ]
Like that time that Reagan passed all those subsidies for the jelly bean companies as part of a “stimulus package”
Oh wait that was Obama and those subsidies were for solar companies....
Freeking idiot
If Woody Allen had a son...It would look like the author.
Woody Allen does have a son. He looks a lot like Frank Sinatra.
Man, the author looks like a super-douche. I think he might reach arch villain levels of douchiness. He’s like a black hole of douches, sucking more douche matter into his giant event horizon of bitterness. I don’t think I like this guy.
She looks like a typical liberal woman.
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