margarine

     

Margarine (pronounce /ˈmɑrdʒərɪn/ or /ˈmɑrgəriːn/), as a generic term, can indicate any of a wide range of butter substitutes. In many parts of the world, margarine has become the best-selling table spread, although butter and olive oil also command large market shares. Margarine is an ingredient in the preparation of many other foods. In some regions people may refer to margarine as butter in informal speech, but in several countries laws forbid food packaging to refer to margarine as "butter". Recipes sometimes refer to margarine as oleo.

Trivia about margarine

  • In the 1860s Hippolyte Mege-Mouries invented this butter substitute made from animal & vegetable fats
  • Hippolyte Mege-Mouries invented it in 1869 to satisfy "imperial" desire for a butter substitute
  • The inventor of this substitute named it after the Greek word for "pearly"--margarites
  • When it was 1st introduced into England from France, it was called "butterine"
  • This butter substitute was first made of beef suet, cow's udder & skim milk