While Betty Crocker is often associated with 1950s happy homemaking, she originally belonged to a different
generation. Created in 1921 as a �friend to homemakers� for the Washburn Crosby Company (a forerunner to General
Mills) in Minneapolis, her purpose was to answer consumer mail. �She� was actually the women of the Home Service
Department who signed Betty�s name. Eventually, Betty Crocker�s local radio show on WCCO expanded, and audiences
around the nation tuned her in, tried her money-saving recipes, and wrote Betty nearly 5,000 fan letters per day.
In Finding Betty Crocker, Susan Marks offers an utterly unique look at the culinary and marketing history of America�s
First Lady of Food.