Chef Boyardee: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:ChefBoyardeeMinibites.jpg|left|thumb|Two Chef Boyardee Mini Bites canned pasta products.]]
[[Image:ChefBoyardeeMinibites.jpg|left|thumb|Two Chef Boyardee Mini Bites canned pasta products.]]
[[image:Chefboyardee.JPG|right|thumb|Can of Chef Boyardee.]]
[[image:Chefboyardee.JPG|right|thumb|Can of Chef Boyardee lasagna.]]
Later, he sold his brand to [[American Home Foods]] (later [[International Home Foods]]) for around [[United States dollar|$]]6 million after family concerns about the company's internal growth and its struggling cashflow after growing so rapidly. Boiardi then took his money and invested a substantial portion into steel mills, which then helped produce goods needed for the Korean war effort. Boiardi's company made and prepared millions of rations for the American and other allied troops during [[World War II]], and for his efforts he was awarded a gold star order of excellence from the [[United States War Department]]. He then helped make new Italian food products for the American market until his death. [[ConAgra Foods]] acquired International Home Foods in 2000 and continues to use his likeness on Chef Boyardee brand products.
Later, he sold his brand to [[American Home Foods]] (later [[International Home Foods]]) for around [[United States dollar|$]]6 million after family concerns about the company's internal growth and its struggling cashflow after growing so rapidly. Boiardi then took his money and invested a substantial portion into steel mills, which then helped produce goods needed for the Korean war effort. Boiardi's company made and prepared millions of rations for the American and other allied troops during [[World War II]], and for his efforts he was awarded a gold star order of excellence from the [[United States War Department]]. He then helped make new Italian food products for the American market until his death. [[ConAgra Foods]] acquired International Home Foods in 2000 and continues to use his likeness on Chef Boyardee brand products.



Revision as of 02:54, 10 October 2008

File:Chef Boyardee logo.png
Chef Boyardee logo.

Ettore Boiardi (October 22, 1897 – June 21, 1985), better known as "Chef Boyardee", was an Italian-born chef who became famous for his eponymous brand of food products.

History

Ettore (Hector) Boiardi was born in Piacenza, Italy to Giuseppe and Maria Maffi Boiardi. On May 9, 1914, at the age of 16, he arrived at Ellis Island aboard the French ship La Lorraine. His culinary reputation grew and he became the head chef at the Plaza Hotel in New York. In 1915, he supervised the catering for the reception of President Woodrow Wilson's second marriage[1] at the Greenbrier, in West Virginia. His entrepreneurial skill became fine-tuned when he opened his first restaurant, Il Giardino d'Italia, in Cleveland, Ohio in 1926. Patrons asked for samples and recipes of his spaghetti sauce, which he would often give to the customers in old milk bottles.

As demand grew, in 1928 he began to use a factory to keep up with orders. It was at this time that he set his sights on selling his product nationally, touting the low cost of his spaghetti products as a good choice to serve to the entire family. In 1938, the factory was moved to Milton, Pennsylvania, where Boiardi had greater input into the quality control of the ingredients placed into his products. He even grew mushrooms in the basement factory for use in his creations. Boiardi was quite proud of his Italian heritage. He sold his products under the brand name Chef Boy-Ar-Dee, allowing his American customers to pronounce his name properly.[1]

Two Chef Boyardee Mini Bites canned pasta products.
File:Chefboyardee.JPG
Can of Chef Boyardee lasagna.

Later, he sold his brand to American Home Foods (later International Home Foods) for around $6 million after family concerns about the company's internal growth and its struggling cashflow after growing so rapidly. Boiardi then took his money and invested a substantial portion into steel mills, which then helped produce goods needed for the Korean war effort. Boiardi's company made and prepared millions of rations for the American and other allied troops during World War II, and for his efforts he was awarded a gold star order of excellence from the United States War Department. He then helped make new Italian food products for the American market until his death. ConAgra Foods acquired International Home Foods in 2000 and continues to use his likeness on Chef Boyardee brand products.

Boiardi appeared in many print advertisements and television commercials for his brand in the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s.

Boiardi died in Parma, Ohio, on June 21, 1985 at the age of 87.[1] At the time of his death, Chef Boy-ar-dee products were bringing in USD$500 million per year. Boiardi's wife Helen died in 1995. At the time of her death, they were survived by their only child, Mario, two grandchildren, and five great-grandchildren.[2]

In popular culture

  • In the 2007 Pixar film Ratatouille, the food critic Anton Ego sneeringly compares the late great chef Auguste Gusteau with Chef Boyardee.
  • Calvin from Calvin and Hobbes once wrote a report claiming that the first president of the United States was Chef Boyardee.
  • In episode 15-115 "Crappy Birthday" of The King of Queens, Doug Heffernan disagrees with his friend Richie Iannucci about whether or not Chef Boyardee is real.

References

  1. ^ a b c UPI story (June 23, 1985), "Hector Boiardi Is Dead: Began Chef Boy-ar-dee", The New York Times, pp. Late City Final Edition, Section 1, Page 28, Column 4, retrieved 2007-07-11 “Hector Boiardi, founder of Chef Boy-ar-dee Foods, one of the first packaged Italian food businesses in the nation, died Friday night after a short illness. He was 87 years old.” “His company was first called Chef Boiardi, but Mr. Boiardi found that customers and salesmen had difficulty pronouncing his name, so he changed the brand name to the phonetic spelling, ‘Boy-ar-dee.’” “He came to the United States in 1917 and worked at hotels in New York and Greenbrier, W.Va., where he directed the catering at the reception for President Woodrow Wilson's second marriage, ”
  2. ^ Anonymous (July 7, 1995), "Helen J. Boiardi, 90; Started Line of Pasta", The New York Times, retrieved 2007-07-11 “Mrs. Boiardi is survived by a son, Mario, of Queenstown, Md.; two sisters, a brother, two grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.”

External links