Q: Who Invented Sliced Bread Anyway?
Published October 04, 2006
A: It may get a lot of credit now, but at the time of its debut in 1928, sliced bread received less-than-rave reviews. Baker and inventor Otto Frederick Rohwedder had spent 15 years perfecting his bread slicer (finally settling on one that wrapped the sliced bread to hold it together, as opposed to the hat pin method he'd been experimenting with earlier), but consumers weren't quick to convert. People found the sliced bread strange and senseless.
In fact, it wasn't until the advent of Wonder Bread, and the collective realization that sliced bread worked better in the toaster, that Rohwedder's invention really took off. By World War II, the military was using sliced bread to serve peanut butter and jelly sandwiches as part of soldiers' rations. Previously uncommon, the PB&J gained a loyal following among servicemen, who kept making the sandwich, sliced bread and all, after they came back to the home front.
- Q: Who Invented Sliced Bread Anyway?
- Published: October 04, 2006
- Type: News
- Section: Tastes
- Filed Under: Culture: Business and Economics, Tastes: Food and Drink, Culture: History
- Part of a feature: mental_floss Question of the Day
- Writer: Mental_Floss
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Comments
Well rumor has it that sliced bread is the greatest thing.











Well, Judge Smails didn't think it was such a great thing. He never slices.