The Mallomar is Not a Cookie
                                          by Maggie Van Ostrand
                                        
 
                                            
		 
 
	 
	 
 
                   
					Those not in the know, call a Mallomar a "cookie." They don't  
understand. "Cookie" is not a descriptive word for a Mallomar. If you've 
 never experienced a Mallomar, they can make your eyes roll back in your 
 head with pleasure, and it doesn't even involve sex. Mallomars are  
delectable, delicious, divine dumplings of desire. Those not in the know 
 may easily say the Mallomar is just a cookie, but that's like saying  
Fred Astaire was just a dancer.  
 
For the Uninitiated: Seek out the double box with the shiny yellow  
wrapper displaying a picture of the contents on the outside. Die-hard  
Mallomar fans have been known to suck on this image to relieve tension,  
as they claw at the box like a toddler unwrapping a Christmas gift.  
 
Made since 1913 by Nabisco (National Biscuit Company) in a single  
Pennsylvania bakery, Mallomars have a thick layer of rounded, smooth  
marshmallow on a circular Graham cracker base, all draped in pure dark  
chocolate. Because of the manner in which the chocolate is poured over  
the marshmallow and Graham cracker and, to make it the ultimate comfort  
food, there's a nipple on top.      
 
An enormously appealing quality about the chocolate coating is its  
distinctive initial crackle. It's imperative that the exterior of the  
Mallomar itself is not cracked when the box is opened, or the crunch is  
deflected and becomes merely a thwarted thud. You see, a Mallomar's  
chocolate exterior is more of a crust than a coating. Or even more  
accurate would be the word "mantle." It has a noble mantle of chocolate. 
   
 
The history of a Mallomar's ingredients ignite the imagination almost 
 as much as their combined ingredients tantalize the palate.   
 
 CHOCOLATE.  Few foods cause such a passionate reaction at the  
mention of their name as does chocolate. That's all you have to say to  
see that glazed look in someone's eyes, a look usually reserved for  
lovers. Just the word "chocolate" evokes rolling waves of warm and  
comforting feelings that transcend age, gender, and time itself.  
Chocolate existed long before the Hershey family ever wrapped their  
kisses in silver foil, before England's Cadbury made the first edible  
chocolate bar in 1847, and even before the Three Wise Men trekked across 
 the desert with gifts.  
 
Scientists have recently discovered residues of cocoa, the basis for  
chocolate, in pots dating to 900 B.C. and perhaps even earlier. In all  
probability, the first chocoholics were the Mayans. The latest data  
supporting the Mayans obsession with chocolate comes from ceramic  
vessels found at an archaeological site in Central America, suggesting  
that liquid chocolate may have been poured back and forth from jug to  
jug to produce the froth that was considered by the Maya and the Aztecs  
to be the best part of a chocolate drink. It's easier to quit booze,  
smoking and caffeine, than never having another taste of chocolate.  
Chocolate has  frequently been given a bad rap, like it causes acne,  
heart problems and tooth rot. Not so. If you've got zits, it's probably  
the fault of the Zit Lobbyists in Washington. The University of  
Pennsylvania could find no correlation between chocolate and acne.  
Regarding bad teeth, one of the ingredients in chocolate (cocoa butter)  
might even prevent tooth decay by protectively coating the teeth. As to  
heart problems, University of California, Davis, has found that  
chocolate carries high levels of chemicals known as phenolics, some of  
which may help lower the risk of heart disease.    
 
 MARSHMALLOW.  An equally crucial component to the Mallomar is  
marshmallow. Where does this word come from? A mallow is a type of shrub 
 whose cousins are hibiscus, okra, and cotton. Okay, that's the second  
half of the word. The first half is where the mallow grows. In a marsh. A 
 confection is made from the root of the marsh mallow. The mallow was  
first found in an Olde English medical book written about 1000 A.D. and  
it was spelled merscmealwe. Kind of a shame that Jesus never got to eat a 
 Mallomar.   
 
GRAHAM CRACKERS. For the round base of the Mallomar, we can thank an  
early 19th-Century Presbyterian clergyman named Sylvester Graham. Born  
in Connecticut in 1794, Graham studied at Amherst and was ordained to  
the ministry when he was in his early 30s. That may be why some Mallomar 
 zealots actually hear the celestial choir upon first bite. An ardent  
advocate of the temperance movement, the Reverend Mr. Graham believed  
his vegetarian diet could cure alcoholism, eliminate impure thoughts,  
and stifle sexual urges. Maybe that works if you only eat the Graham  
cracker by itself, but not an integrated Mallomar.   
 
HOW TO EAT A MALLOMAR. For the impatient Mallomar fanatic, a fast  
bite of all three parts simultaneously results in a rush of integrated  
flavors flooding the taste buds for a quick thrill, necessitating a  
second Mallomar immediately. This can cause an addiction for which the  
Betty Ford Center has no known remedy. For the discerning fanatic, a  
slow embrace between teeth and chocolate is the preferred method of  
enjoyment. First, the sound triggers one's imagination. Is it the sound  
of you as a child with boots cracking the layer of ice over snow on a  
wintry morning, or the click of high heels on a cement floor, or  
Michelangelo's chisel seducing David out of a block of marble? Then  
comes the texture -- rich, dark, sensual. If Denzel Washington were a  
food, he'd be that. The succulent marshmallow can either be allowed to  
slowly melt in one's mouth, or squished sweetly and tantalizingly  
between one's tongue and the roof of one's mouth. Or squished between  
the teeth by the tongue, if nobody is watching. For Actor's Studio  
method eaters, there are at least three wondrous ways to enjoy a  
Mallomar. Eater number one enjoys the Mallomar in three to four bites  
and it's gone forever; Eater number two separates the Graham cracker  
base and eats that first, followed by the remaining chocolate-covered  
marshmallow which can be eaten either right-side up or down. Some enjoy  
the crackling sound more if it's made with the bottom teeth. Eater  
number three is the highest Mallomar aficionado -- He can get the  
marshmallow out of the chocolate without denting it. This takes years of 
 practice.   
 
Back in the 70s when the then-world's #1 tennis player, Ilie Nastase, 
 said of upcoming Superstar, Bjorn Borg, "We are playing tennis. He is  
playing something else." A cookie aisle is full of cookies; a Mallomar  
is something else.  
 
 ###                                        
																				 |