Is Betty Crocker a real person? The question has plagued more than a few bakers since her introduction in 1921. The Washburn-Crosby Company first conceived of her as a way to answer customers’ cooking questions. When customers (mostly women) wrote to the company, they received a response signed by Betty Crocker.
“There are records of women who saved her letters who believed that she was a real person,” says Elizabeth A. Blake, an English professor at Clark University who researches cookbooks and food writing. “I’ve come across a lot of people who weren’t aware that she’s not real, even now.”
That’s right, Betty Crocker is not a real person. But the Washburn-Crosby Company, which became General Mills in 1928, sometimes marketed her as if she might be. Betty is just one of many fictional food mascots made famous in the 20th century. Here are some of the most famous: