Tasty facts you didn't know about Krispy Kreme (2024)

Tasty facts you didn't know about Krispy Kreme

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Tasty facts you didn't know about Krispy Kreme (1)

krispykremeUK/Facebook

Invented in the middle of the Great Depression, Krispy Kreme has stood the test of time for over eight decades. With the brand now being rolled out in McDonald’s across the US, and regular new launches landing on its menus, it continues to be one of the most coveted brands in the world. But how much do you really know about the company and its melt-in-the-mouth doughnuts?

From what exactly is in the Original Glazed recipe to how to bag yourself a free one, click or scroll on for some seriously tasty facts about Krispy Kreme.

Krispy Kreme started in Nashville

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Krispy Kreme/Facebook

Although most people believe Krispy Kreme's origins lie in North Carolina, its story really began elsewhere.A just-out-of-college Vernon Rudolph went to help out at his uncle Ishmael Armstrong’s general store in Paducah, Kentucky in the early 1930s. But after a few years, the family decided to sell up, move south and set up a doughnuts-only shop in the bigger city of Nashville in the hope of finding more business.

Vernon Rudolph was inspired by Camel

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Krispy Kreme/Facebook

After a few years working for his family in Nashville, young Vernon wanted to branch out on his own. In 1937 he started looking for a location to open his own doughnut shop. How did he choose where to go? He took inspiration from Camel tobacco, which wasbased in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. If Camel could be successful there, why couldn’t he?

The Original Glazed recipe came from a French chef

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Krispy Kreme UK/Facebook

It's believed Vernon bought the legendary Original Glazed recipe for his doughnuts from a French chef. Some sources say this chef was called Joe Le Beau and that he came from New Orleans, while others say his name was Joseph G LeBoeuf and he lived in Louisville, Kentucky. Either way, we have a lot to thank the guy for.

The doughnuts may contain potato

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Krispy Kreme/Facebook

They weigh next to nothing and practically dissolve when you bite into them, but what is it that gives Krispy Kreme doughnuts theirsignature taste and texture? No one knows for sure, as the recipe is reportedly locked in a vault at the company HQ in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. However, according to food historians, mashed potato may be the secret ingredient – and the company claims it hasn’t changedthe recipe much since the early days.

The company started as a wholesale business

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Krispy Kreme/Facebook

When Vernon Rudolph first set himself up, Krispy Kreme was a wholesale doughnut factory that sold only to grocery stores. However, the scent of freshly baked doughnuts wafting from the building meant the operation didn’t stay secret and the young businessman had passersby knocking on the door asking if they could buy whatever he was baking. In fact, so many people asked that Vernon built a window so they could buy the hot treats straightoff the street.

It expanded in the Forties and Fifties

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Krispy Kreme/Facebook

The doughnut shop expanded into a chain in the 1940sand 1950swith family-owned franchises opening across the Carolinas. By the late 1950s, there were Krispy Kreme stores in 12 states, all with the same factory-retail layout which allowed visitors to see the hot doughnuts being handmade inthe backand displayed the delicious doughnuts in a glass case at the front.

It once sold pizza

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Krispy Kreme/Facebook

Believe it or not, Krispy Kreme once sold pizza. It’s not clear why this savoury product was first introduced or why it disappeared from the menu, with there being very little evidence of the dish aside from this post on the brand’s official Facebook page. These days the chain is pretty successful selling doughnuts and coffee only.

They owe their consistency to the Ring King

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Krispy Kreme/Facebook

Though customers loved Krispy Kreme doughnuts, each of the mostly family-owned stores were producing slightly different doughnutsdespite following the same recipe. To solve the problem of consistency, Vernon built a central plant that distributed a dry ingredients mix to all of the stores and installed identical doughnut making machinesinside each store. Thisconveyor belt contraptionwas called the Ring King and an updated version of it is still used by stores today.

There’s a waterfall of warm sugar glaze

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Krispy Kreme/Facebook

To make the signature Original Glazed doughnuts, the yeast dough goes through an air-pressurised machine which shapes it into perfectly puffed rings. It’s allowed to proof for 30 minutes then it’s fried in vegetable shortening, all while moving along the conveyor belt. Once cooked, the doughnuts travel through a waterfall of warm sugar glazeto ensure aneven finish.

An Original Glazed doughnut takes an hour to make

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Jeffrey L. Cohen/Flickr/CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

From start to finish the doughnut-making process takes approximately one hour. That includes 33 minutes of preparation and frying, plus 25 minutes of icing and cooling. While the Original Glazed doughnuts are a job mostly done by machine, the jelly and iced doughnuts need to be filled and decorated by hand.

It's raised millions for worthwhile causes

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KrispyKreme/Facebook

For a bake sale like no other, Krispy Kreme supplies bulk orders of doughnuts for people raising money for a worthy cause. Set up in 1955, its fundraising arm has assisted countless schools, sports teams, churches, charitiesand community organisations to "raise some dough". According to its website,in 2022, the brandhelped raise approximately £29 million ($37m).

The logo is referred to as a bowtie

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KrispyKreme/Facebook

Ever wondered what the Krispy Kreme logo is meant to be? Designed by local architect Benny Dinkins in the shop’s green and red colours for the original store onSouth Main Streetin Old Salem, it was trademarked in 1955. The iconic design isreferred to as the bowtieand has never been changed.

The green tiles arrived in the 1960s

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Krispy Kreme UK/Facebook

Today, a Krispy Kreme shop, with its red, white and green colour scheme, is instantly recognisable from miles away, but it wasn’t always that way. The distinctive green-tiled roof stores only came into play in the 1960s as the chain continued to expand. It was at this time that the famed brand'sheritage road signs also appeared.

It's no longer family owned

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KrispyKreme/Facebook

Though it still has a family-run feel to it, Krispy Kreme is no longer family-owned. After its founder died in the 1970s, the doughnut brand was bought by Beatrice Foods Company in 1976, which also produced theMeadow Gold, Clark Bar, Milk Duds and Dannon Yogurt brands. Not long after, however, a group of early franchisees bought it back. From 2016 to 2021,Krispy Kreme wasa public company owned by German corporation JAB Holdings. It's now publicly traded, listed on Nasdaq since July 2021.

It had its heyday in the 1990s

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Mark Reinstein/Contributor/Getty Images

After a short blipwhen the brand was taken over by Beatrice Foods, Krispy Kreme steadily grew to reach its full potential. In the 1990s it integrated intoAmerican popular culture, and everyone wanted a bite. It featured onSex and the City, made regular appearances on the legal comedy Ally McBeal and had its film debut in Primary Colors starring John Travolta. The doughnut brand was even papped being delivered to the Clinton White House.

The Hot Doughnuts Now light was a game changer

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Gerard's World/Flickr/CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

When Krispy Kreme first opened to customers, if you wanted hot doughnuts you had to queue up at dawn – like most bakeries, everything it sold that day was baked first thing in the morning. Then in 1992, the game-changing Hot Doughnuts Now light was installed in stores, signalling to passersby when a fresh batch was coming out of the fryer. Fast forward to the 21st century and the brand's app will tell you when your local store is serving fresh from the fryer.

Krispy Kreme went international in 2001

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jpellgen/Flickr/CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

The first green-tiled store to open outside of the United States opened in Mississauga, Canada in the early 2000s. When the brand subsequently launchedin Montrealin 2003, the Hot Doughnuts Now sign had to be translatedinto French.International stores in Sydneyand London soonfollowed. Now you’ll also find Krispy Kreme storesacross Asia and the Middle East, and in countries includingMexico, Puerto Ricoand Turkey.

These doughnuts have many celebrity fans

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Mandel Ngan/Staff/Getty Images

Krispy Kreme has a lot of famous fans to its name. Former president Barack Obama famously visited a store in Tampa, Florida, in 2012, and picked up three dozen assorted doughnuts to give to local firefighters. Retired basketball superstar Shaquille O'Neal bought a Krispy Kreme franchise in Atlanta, Georgia, in 2016. Madonna and Beyoncé are also known to enjoy a doughnut or two.

There was once a Krispy Kreme doughnut worth £1,000 ($1,388)

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Krispy Kreme UK/Facebook

The costly creation which took three days to make went on sale in Selfridges, London, in 2014, and its ingredients included vintage Dom Pérignon Champagne jelly, 24-carat gold leaf, 23-carat gold-dusted Belgian white chocolate lotus flower and edible 'diamonds'. It was also served above a 500-year-old Courvoisier and 2002 Dom Pérignon raspberry passion-fruit co*cktail. A more affordable version of the pricey sweet treat was on sale for a limited time.

Krispy Kreme doughnuts are kosher

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Jim, the Photographer/Flickr/CC BY 2.0

The company states thatall the ingredients supplied to its stores for its doughnuts from its mixing plant in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, are kosher. Every store is supplied by the centra plant so, while some individual stores are not certified kosher, as all the doughnut ingredients come from the same place Krispy Kremes are suitable for Jewish people.

There’s an official Krispy Kreme challenge

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Krispy Kreme Challenge/Facebook

If intense physical activity combined with scoffing doughnuts sounds like your idea of fun this might be the challenge for you. Every year North Carolina State University hosts a contestwhere participantshave to run five miles (8km) through the town of Raleigh and consume a dozen doughnuts in under an hour. All the donations go to the UNC Children’s Hospital.

Leftover Krispy Kremes are made into pig feed

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Krispy Kreme UK/Facebook

Ever wondered what happens to imperfect Krispy Kremedoughnuts or any that don’t get sold before the end of the day? They certainly aren’t saved and resoldthe next day. The majority are sent off to be made into animal feed, specifically pig fodder.

Krispy Kreme has approximately 1,400 retail shops

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Ola Christian Gundelsby/Flickr/CC BY-SA 2.0

The king of the doughnut, Krispy Kreme, only has 1,400 retail stores across more than 30 countries.It’s a surprisingly small number when you think of how widely the brand is known and when compared to other fast food chains such as Dunkin’ Donuts and McDonald’s. But what it lacks in size, it makes up for with cult status – it sellsone of the most hyped products in the world.

Some stores make 20 million doughnuts a year

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Krispy Kreme/Facebook

At a Krispy Kreme store, the machine turns on at 4am and begins to churn out hot doughnuts. At a single location, approximately 22,000 are made every day, which is 55,000 a week and 16 million a year.Some of the busiest stores make a whopping 20 million a year, while the company as a whole sold an inconceivable 1.63 billion doughnuts in 2022.

You can now dunk one in your McFlurry

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krispykremeUK/Facebook

In March 2024, Krispy Kreme announced it will be rolling out its products at select McDonald's locations across the US, beginning in Kentucky. While they won't be made onsite at McDonald's, customers will be able to pick up Original Glazed, Chocolate Iced with Sprinklesand a filled ChocolateIced alongside their coffees (or perhaps with a McFlurry to dip it in).A full rollout across US locations is hoped to be completed by 2026.

Now read all about the history of Starbucks

Last updated by Lottie Woodrow.

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28 March 2024

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