Every couple of years, the internet comes to a screeching halt and asks itself: why were corn flakes invented? Be it Googleâs 2019 âYear in Searchâ or 72,900 views and counting on TikTok, the internet has always been fascinated with the origins of various inventions including the one behind chainsaws, and more recently, vanilla flavouring. So, why were corn flakes invented? Is the internet riddled with myths or actual facts regarding the crunchy breakfast treat? Weâre here to set the record straight once and for all.
According to a large chunk of the internet, corn flakes were originally invented to discourage American consumers from masturbating. In short, the crunchy treat was a âhealthy, ready-to-eat anti-masturbatory morning meal.â
Now letâs backtrack to the 18th century, when Westerners perceived masturbation as a moral, physical and mental ailment which required treatment. Enter Doctor John Harvey Kellogg, âone of the loudest anti-masturbation voicesâ in the young United States. The Michigan-based physician was a devout Seventh-day Adventist who advocated âbiological living.â He believed sex was a detriment to physical, emotional and spiritual well-beingâthereby encouraging strict abstention from almost all forms of sexual activity and contact, even among married couples.
In fact, he never consummated his own marriageâwith some even suspecting him to have spent his honeymoon working on his so-called âanti-sexâ books. Kellogg was therefore known to have adopted all of his children.
If Kellogg thought sex with your married partner was a cardinal sin, masturbation was even worse. In his 1887 book titled Plain Facts for Old and Young: Embracing the Natural History and Hygiene of Organic Life, the doctor devoted an entire section to masturbation, which he referred to as âself-pollutionâ and âsolitary viceââadding how it is âthe most dangerous of all sexual abuses.â He also catalogued 39 symptoms of a person âplaguedâ by masturbation, including general infirmity, defective development, mood swings, fickleness, bashfulness, boldness, bad posture, stiff joints, fondness for spicy foods, acne, palpitations and even epilepsy. Among the causes listed were also âexciting and irritating foodââwith stimulants such as tea, coffee, wine, beer and tobacco.
So what was the ultimate solution to all of this âsufferingâ? âA healthy diet,â the doctor preached. Kellogg linked the consumption of certain food and drinks to these so-called âundesirableâ thoughts and urges. In his book, he outlined how âthe most simple, pure and unstimulating dietâ could prevent and end masturbation. In short, the plainer the food, the plainer oneâs libido and sex life.
This is also one of the reasons for the biggest fight the doctor had with his brotherâand business partnerâWill Keith Kellogg. According to the internet, Will had the (damn right) idea that sugar would vastly improve the taste of the cereal but Kellogg stood by his original vision that plain and boring cereal would help kill sexual desires. The flakes hence remained unsweetened.
Kellogg additionally laid out 5 recommendations for this diet in his book, urging readers to:
1. Avoid overeating since âgluttony is fatal to chastity and overeating will be certain to cause emissions, with other evils, in one whose organs are weakened by abuseâ
2. Eat only twice a day since your âsleep will be disturbed, dreams will be more abundant, and emissions will be frequentâ if the stomach contains undigested food
3. Avoid eating stimulating food including âspices, pepper, ginger, mustard, cinnamon, cloves, essences, all condiments, chocolates, pickles, etc.â
4. Avoid drinking stimulating drinks including wine, beer, tea and coffee since their influence âin stimulating the genital organs is notoriousâ
5. Eat and drink bland foods and drinks like fruits, grains, milk and vegetables since they are âwholesome and unstimulating.â Graham flour, oatmeal and ripe fruit are also âindispensables of a diet for those who are suffering from sexual excessesâ
Now that weâve peaked behind the scenes of Kelloggâs anti-sex work, itâs time to address the elephant in the room. Did Kellogg really invent corn flakes to dampen libidos across America? According to the fact-checking website Snopes, this claim is âmostly false.â
Although corn flakes were created as part of Kelloggâs broader advocacy for a plain and bland diet, early advertisements of the breakfast staple made no mention of masturbation or sexual activities of any kindâunlike what the internet has been conditioned to believe. Snopes found that several publications had presented the phrase âhealthy, ready-to-eat anti-masturbatory morning mealâ in quotation marksâgiving readers the impression that those words originated from an actual advertisement for the cereal.
Corn flakes were instead promoted as ânutritious and healthful,â emphasising how easy they were to digest. âCorn flakes were primarily created as an easy-to-digest, pre-prepared and healthy breakfast food, in particular for patients at the Kellogg sanitarium in Michigan,â Snopes added. The supposed âanaphrodisiacâ purpose of corn flakes did not appear in Kelloggâs patent application in 1895 either. The doctor instead emphasised its health benefitsâdescribing the breakfast as being âwell adapted for sick and convalescent persons.â
According to Howard Markel, professor at the University of Michigan and author of The Kelloggs: The Battling Brothers of Battle Creek, corn flakes shot to fame as a âhealth foodâ to counter indigestion, a common health complaint in late 19th century America. At the same time, it also conformed to the strict vegetarian diet of the Seventh-day Adventist church which both the Kellogg brothers were active members of.
What about the sugar addition, you ask? Well, Kellogg saw sugar as a corruption to the entire concept of âhealthyâ food. However, by the 1940s all major cereal companies had pre-coated their cereals with sugarâurging the company to do the same. Kelloggâs even changed up its marketing to emphasise how the cereal also appeals to the âsweet toothâ and is âgood for you no matter how much you eat.â
Corn flakes have undoubtedly left a huge mark on the food industry. While Kelloggâs idea of âbiological livingâ still echoes with health trends like paleo dieting every once in a while, the doctorâs views on sexual healthâparticularly masturbationâthankfully hasnât witnessed the same revival.