Whether filled with chocolate bunnies or marshmallow peeps, Ernst & Haas would like to wish you and your family a wonderful Easter!
Fun Facts About Easter!
Ernst & Haas Management Co. - Tuesday, March 26, 2013
We already know that Easter is one of our favorite holidays - after all, who can resist a decadent chocolate bunny, or competitive egg hunt? Here are some fun facts that make this holiday even better:
1. For Americans, Easter is the second most important holiday to east candy, and lots of it! According to the National Confectioner's Association, Americans consumed 7 billion pounds of candy on Easter in 2001. So, what's the first most candy-eating occasion of the year? Halloween, of course!
2. Nearly 120 million cards will be sent, exchanged, and given this Easter, which means it holds the fourth spot of the largest card-sending celebration in the U.S.
3. Americans buy more than 700 million Marshmallow Peeps during the Easter holiday, which makes Peeps the most popular non-chocolate Easter candy.
4. Besides chocolate, what other candy pops its head around the corner during Easter time? Jelly beans! An astounding 16 billion jelly beans are made exclusively for Easter. That's enough beans to fill a plastic egg the size of a 9 story building!
5. In the early 19th century, the first chocolate eggs were made in Europe. They remain among the most popular treats associated with Easter.
6. In all, 90 million chocolate Easter bunnies are made for Easter every year. And, when taking a bite into one of those millions of chocolate bunnies, 76% of Americans prefer to bite off the ears first, while 5% eat the feet first and 4% eat the tail first.
7. Like many holidays on the calendar, Easter also has its own catchy tunes or carols. They're not just for Christmas time! One such Easter carol, with its words in Latin, began as Tempus adest floridum, which can be translated as "Spring has now brought forth flowers". Other "Easter Carols" you might know? "Here Comes Peter Cottontail", "Easter Parade", and "The Carnival Song".
8. Common Easter symbols include the cross, Easter bells, the Easter lily, and of course, eggs and rabbits!
9. A tradition since 1878, the Easter egg roll on the White House lawn turns the area into a massive playground for children from all over the country.
10. In medieval times, a festival of "egg-throwing" was held in church. The priest would throw a hard-broiled egg to one of the choir boys, and then tossed from one choir boy to the next. When the clock struck 12, whoever held the egg, was the winner and got to keep the egg.