Why do we eat popcorn at the movies? - Andrew Smith

1,119,192 views ・ 2023-04-20

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Soft percussion and a toasty scent mark the violent transformation
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of tough seeds into cloud-like puffs.
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This is the almost magical process of popcorn-making.
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But how did we actually end up with this whimsical food?
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All the corn eaten today is derived from a tall grass called teosinte,
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which Indigenous people in what is now southern Mexico
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began selectively breeding about 9,000 years ago.
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An ear of teosinte originally yielded somewhere between 5 and 12 small kernels,
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each with a hard shell called a pericarp.
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And some varieties had a fantastic feature:
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if they reached a certain temperature, their kernels exploded.
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Popcorn kernels pop because water and starch
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are sealed tightly within the pericarp.
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When heated, the moisture inside becomes steam.
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As it expands, it increases the internal pressure
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and the solid starch transforms into a gel-like substance.
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The pressure finally overcomes the pericarp’s resistance and it bursts—
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the steam and starch expanding to form a foam
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that quickly cools and dries in the air.
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From this small-scale explosion also rush forth the compounds
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that give popcorn its powerful aroma.
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Ancient Indigenous American people cultivated other maize varieties
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with larger, more flavorful kernels and thinner pericarps.
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But the hard-shelled, poppable variety also persisted
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and spread through parts of the Americas.
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By the time European colonizers arrived in the late 1400s,
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Indigenous American people were preparing and eating corn in myriad manners.
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Popcorn wasn’t a major part of their diets.
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But it popped up in European accounts,
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which described the preparation of “toasted” or “parched” corn
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and its use in some Aztec feasts and celebrations.
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Despite initial reluctance,
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colonizers eventually began cultivating— and popping— corn.
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The methods they used at first were inconsistent and messy.
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But with the invention of “wire over the fire” baskets around 1837,
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the process got easier.
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Soon, popcorn picked up steam
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and exploded with a reputation as a low-cost, entertaining snack.
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Over the following decades,
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it became a mainstay at events and hundreds of recipes materialized,
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mixing popcorn with sweet and savory ingredients.
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But popcorn hadn't yet reached its height.
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At the 1893 World’s Fair, an inventor showcased the first popcorn machine:
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a wagon that tossed popcorn in seasoning as it cooked.
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Soon enough, vendors could be seen roving US city streets with similar machines.
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Interestingly, movie theaters were some of the only American venues
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where you wouldn’t find popcorn at the time.
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Many cinema operators saw their establishments
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as part of a grand theater tradition at odds with popcorn—
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what they considered a messy, low-brow street food.
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However, when the Great Depression hit in 1929,
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movies provided the public with a welcome distraction.
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And they had recently gone from being silent and subtitled to acquiring sound,
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making them accessible to a wider audience,
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including non-literate people.
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At about five or ten cents a bag,
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popcorn proved an inexpensive luxury for moviegoers,
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so theater operators pounced on the money-making opportunity.
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Today, a medium bag of popcorn might cost about 60 cents to make,
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but retail for around $6— a 1,000% markup.
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Popcorn sales generate nearly 40% of all movie theater profits,
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helping to offset the high prices that theaters pay film studios.
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Over the last century, people throughout the Americas continued popping corn,
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and different preparations took hold in markets worldwide.
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When microwavable popcorn was launched in the 1980s,
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popcorn popped off yet again.
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Dozens of kinds of popcorn are now grown in the US.
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Different strains assume distinctive shapes when their kernels explode,
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most commonly taking so-called “mushroom” and “butterfly” forms.
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And they’ve been bred for supreme poppability.
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Over the last century, the amount that popcorn expands has doubled:
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now, kernels can reach up to 50 times their original size upon popping.
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Not to be corny, but popcorn’s come a long way.
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This video was made possible with support from Marriott Hotels.
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With over 590 hotels and resorts across the globe,
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Marriott Hotels celebrates the curiosity that propels us to travel.
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Check out some of the exciting ways TED-Ed and Marriott are working together
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and book your next journey at Marriott Hotels.
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