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Pastimes : KKD - Krispy Kreme -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Neeka who wrote (11)5/18/2001 8:17:32 PM
From: Jon Khymn  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 214
 
>>why the Krispy in Krispy Kreme? <<

Hhmmm, good question...
I sent an e-mail to KKD, hope someone there is old enough to know where the name came from.

A short history from KKD web site:

----------

In 1933, Vernon Rudolph, the founder of Krispy Kreme, bought a doughnut shop in Paducah, Kentucky from a French chef from New Orleans. He received the company's assets, good will, and the rights to a secret yeast-raised doughnut recipe.

It wasn't long before Rudolph and his partner decided to look for a larger market. They moved their operations to Nashville, Tennessee, where other members of the Rudolph family joined the business and opened shops in Charleston, West Virginia, and Atlanta, Georgia.

At first, the business was primarily delivery-selling doughnuts to local grocery stores. Then, during the early summer of 1937, Rudolph decided to leave Nashville to open his own doughnut shop. He took with him two other young men, a 1936 Pontiac, $200 in cash, doughnut-making equipment, the secret recipe and, most importantly, the name Krispy Kreme Doughnuts.

After some disappointments searching for a new location, Rudolph settled in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. During the late 1930s the city was developing into an economic hub in the Southeast with diversified industries such as tobacco and textiles. "Why not doughnuts, too," said Rudolph.

The three partners used their last $25 to rent a building across from Salem College and Academy in what is now called historic Old Salem. With too little money left to buy ingredients, Rudolph convinced a local grocer to lend them what they needed in return for payment once the first doughnuts were sold.

Next, Rudolph needed a way to deliver the doughnuts so he took out the back seat of the Pontiac and installed a delivery rack. On July 13, 1937, the first Krispy Kreme doughnuts were made and sold at the new Winston-Salem shop.

Soon afterward, people began stopping by the shop to ask if they could buy hot doughnuts. The demand was so great that Rudolph opened the shop for retail business by cutting a hole in the shop's wall so he could sell the doughnuts. This innovation was the beginning of Krispy Kreme's modern-day window service.

Krispy Kreme is best known for its fresh, glazed, yeast-raised doughnuts, "Krispy Kreme Original Glazed," which stores announce to their customers with the unique glowing red "Hot Doughnuts Now" sign. Krispy Kreme also makes more than a dozen other varieties of yeast-raised and cake doughnuts, real fruit pies, cinnamon buns and several varieties of snack foods.



To: Neeka who wrote (11)5/23/2001 10:07:20 PM
From: Jon Khymn  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 214
 
>> Why the name Krispy Kreme? <<

It seems like no one at the KKD knows about it either.
This is the response I got from KKD.

**********

Thanks for your email You're going to think this is a bit strange, but
we
really don't know where the name and spelling for Krispy Kreme came
from.
In 1933 Ishmael Armstrong purchased a doughnut shop, from Joe LeBeau of
Paducah, KY. Along with the store he acquired the name Krispy Kreme
and
the secret recipe for our yeast-raised doughnuts. Beyond that, we
don't
know anything more about the name.

Thanks for your interest in Krispy Kreme.