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Rice-a-roni Inventor Dies Near San Francisco

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  • Rice-a-roni Inventor Dies Near San Francisco

    RICE-A-RONI INVENTOR DIES NEAR SAN FRANCISCO
    Adam Tanner, Reuters Life

    Edmonton Journal (Alberta)
    October 23, 2007 Tuesday

    SAN FRANSCISCO - The son of Italian immigrants who turned an Armenian
    recipe into Rice-A-Roni, the popular dish known to Americans since the
    1960s as The San Francisco Treat, has died, his family said on Monday.

    Vincent DeDomenico died on Thursday of natural causes at his home
    in Napa, California, north of San Francisco, his daughter Marla
    Bleecher said.

    DeDomenico worked in his family's pasta business when he was inspired
    in 1958 to create the mix of vermicelli, macaroni and flavourings
    that millions of Americans came to know by its advertising slogan.

    "My uncle Tom's wife got the recipe from an Armenian neighbour and
    served it one night for dinner," Bleecher said. "My dad had been
    making dried soups for the Army ... When he tasted it he said maybe
    we can make something like this in dry form.

    "He went back to the plant and they started messing around with it,
    starting with the soup base they made for the Army," she said.

    Rice-A-Roni was soon found on American tables coast to coast
    following the television advertising campaign in the 1960s that
    featured scenes of San Francisco and its cable cars, along with a
    catchy jingle to promote the easy-to-make dish. The ads also gave
    the city much publicity.

    "It's a brand that's been great for the city and is a vestige of my
    childhood," San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom told the San Francisco
    Chronicle last year. "Just the sight and sound of the cable car bell
    evokes the old jingle."

    The DeDomenico family in 1986 sold their firm, the Golden Grain
    Macaroni Company, to Quaker Oats as part of deal worth about $300
    million, Bleecher said. It is now owned by PepsiCo.

    Even after creating the U.S. packaged food classic, DeDomenico
    continued to tinker with new culinary ideas, using his family as
    tasters. "He brought all these test products home," his daughter
    said. "We ate these products until we were all sick of them."


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