The first recipe for the campfire treat is 90-years-old, but the seeds of the s'more go back much further
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Summer, Entertaining, PureWow
If you’ve got a fire pit, great! Bust out the graham crackers and marshmallows and let your guests go to town. But even if you’re not equipped to handle actual marshmallow roasting, you can still hop on the bandwagon with thisoven-baked s’mores recipe.
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Like savoring a slice ofwatermelon,licking popsiclesandeating dozens of hot dogs, makings'moresis a summer food. And while the first official recipe appeared 90 years ago, the undocumented tradition of the s'more may have started earlier.

The very first marshmallows came from a plant calledAlthaea officinalis. Early civilizations, including the ancient Greeks and Romans, used the root and leaves of the plant for medicinal purposes, often to help with inflammation (and as a laxative). In fact, the word "Althaea" comes from the Greek "altheo" meaning "to cure." But it was the French who first marketed marshmallow asa treat rather than a medicine, combining the root juice of the plant with eggs and sugar beaten into a foam. They formed the soft paste into a lozenge and called it pâté de guimauve. It's purpose was two-fold: soothe the throat and taste good. But this treat was expensive and labor-intensive, much like all marshmallow-based medicines of the day. By the end of the 19th century, gelatin has replaced the juice from the actual plant because it was a close approximation in taste and form but much cheaper alternative.

Graham crackers were originally invented to抑制性欲. Early 19th-century New Jersey Presbyterian minister Sylvester Graham believed that humanity, asAtlas Obscura reports, was on its way to a moral collapse due to an obsession with carnal desires. He also believed the food we were eating greatly contributed to our undeterred need to have sex. A simple steak dinner with wine could, according to a 1847 text he wrote, "increase the concupiscent excitability ... of the genital organs." So, he promoted a special process of baking using only "finely ground, unbleached wheat flour, wheat bran and coarsely ground germ." Out of this, came a bland, dry cracker that he named after himself - the graham cracker.

There are a few of potential precursors to the modern-day iteration of s'mores we know today.Victorian-era funeral cakes, specially-prepared upon the death of a loved one, sometimes included chocolate and marshmallow. During the 1890s, a marshmallow roasting fad took hold of summer resort towns in the Northeast. Places like Asbury Park in New Jersey hosted them, often drawing a young crowd especially since newspapers at the time called the roasts an"excellent medium for flirtation"since people could nibble off each other's sticks.Mallomars, which are essentially s'mores in cookie form, first appeared on shelves in 1913.Moonpies debuted a few years later and are also basically a s'more cousin.

While all of these tasty innovations got the idea of roasted marshmallow, chocolate and graham crackers into people's heads (and mouths), it wasn't until 1927 when it all came together in gooey symphony.

The first official recipe for a s'more came out in the 1927 Girl Scout guidebook"Tramping and Trailing with the Girl Scouts."

While the book was meant to give advice on how to be a good Girl Scout (always getting a parent's permission before hiking!) it's lasting legacy was the "Some More." Originally intending to feed 16 hungry scouts, the recipe, which was later credited to a troop leader named Loretta Scott Crew, calls for 16 graham crackers, eight bars of plain chocolate and 16 marshmallows. Next, it says to toast the marshmallows to a "crispy, gooey state." Then, put the marshmallow on top of a chocolate bar and in between two graham crackers and, viola, you got a "Some More." It's unclear when the name was shortened to simply "s'more," but various Girl Scout publications kept referring to the treat as "Some More"untilat least 1971.

If nothing else, it all makes for a good campfire story.