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[[File:Chocolate Pie.jpg|thumb|200px|Choco pie]]

The '''Choco pie''' or '''Choco Pie''' is a [[snack cake]] consisting of two small round layers of cake with [[marshmallow]] filling with [[chocolate]] covering, similar to a [[pie]].

== History ==
Variations on the original go back as far as 1917 in the American South. In 1929, Chattanooga Bakery created the official [[Moon pie]] with marshmallow filling and [[Graham cracker]]s for local miners in [[Chattanooga, Tennessee]].<ref>{{cite web|title=MoonPie: About|url=http://www.moonpie.com/about|publisher=[[Chattanooga Bakery]]|accessdate=3 June 2012}}</ref>

In the wake of [[World War II]] and the Korean War, the snack gained popularity in East Asia through its introduction by American GIs. Starting in 1958, a similar type of marshmallow filled cake was developed by [[Morinaga & Company|Morinaga]] in Japan as 'Angel Pie'.<ref>{{cite web|title=エンゼルパイといつまでも|url=http://blog.morinaga.co.jp/angelpie/history.html|publisher=[[Morinaga & Company]]|accessdate=3 June 2012|language=Japanese}}</ref>

[[Orion Confectionery|Tongyang Confectionery]] began selling a similar product known as 'Orion Choco Pie' in 1974. The company claims that in 1973, a member of the Tongyang R&D team visited a hotel in [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia, US]], and was inspired by the chocolate-coated sweets available in the hotel's restaurant. He returned to South Korea and began experimenting with a chocolate biscuit cake, creating the Choco Pie as it is known to Koreans.<ref>{{cite web|title=새우깡의 ‘깡’ 무슨 뜻? ‘장수과자’ 이야기|url=http://www.fnnews.com/view_news/2011/05/04/110504105416.html|publisher=[[The Financial News]]|accessdate=5 May 2011|author=남형도기자|date=4 May 2011|language=Korean}}</ref> The name 'Choco Pie' became popular when Tongyang first released the Orion Choco Pie, and was well received by Korean children as well as the elderly thanks to its affordable price and white marshmallow filling. Tongyang Confectionery later renamed the company Orion Confectionery thanks to the success of the Orion Choco Pie brand.

In 1979 [[Lotte Confectionery]] began to sell a similar confection. When Lotte Confectionery put the Lotte Choco Pie on the market, it chose to spell the prefix 'Cho' slightly differently in [[Hangul]] from how Tongyang was spelling it. [[Haitai]] and [[Crown Confectionery]] also began selling their own versions of Choco pies. In 1999 Tongyang (Orion) filed a lawsuit against Lotte for their use of the term 'Choco Pie'. The results of the court ruling, however, determined that the term 'Choco Pie' was to be considered a common noun due to its generic descriptive sense in reference to confections of similar composition.<ref name="ChosunIlbo"/>

North Korean workers at the [[Kaesong Industrial Complex]] in [[North Korea]] receive Choco Pies as part of their compensation. Prior to the closing of the complex during the [[2013 Korean crisis]], workers received up to 20 Choco Pies per day in addition to their wages. The workers would often resell the pies on the black market. After the complex's five-month halt in operations, workers were cut back to a maximum of two Choco Pies per day.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.nknews.org/2013/09/choco-pie-distribution-to-be-cut-down-at-kaesong/ |title=Choco Pie distribution to be cut down at Kaesong |author=Debbie Jeong |date=September 17, 2013 |work=NK News |accessdate=February 11, 2014}}</ref>

== Export ==
Starting in the 2000s, Orion began using the Choco Pie to gain a foothold in foreign markets, and now controls a two-thirds share of the Chinese snack market, with a third of Orion's revenue coming from outside Korea in 2006.<ref>{{cite web|last=Kelly|first=Tim|title=Cookie Monster|url=http://members.forbes.com/global/2006/0227/026A.html|publisher=Forbes.com LLC|accessdate=17 March 2012|archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20110711020145/http://members.forbes.com/global/2006/0227/026A.html|archivedate=11 July 2011|date=27 February 2006}}</ref> Around 12.1 billion Choco Pies have been sold all over the world.{{clarify|date=December 2009}}<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.chocopie.co.kr |title=(Korean) |publisher=[[Orion Confectionery]]|date= |language=Korean|accessdate=30 December 2009}}</ref>

Orion has a share in four major markets - [[South Korea]], [[Russia]], [[Vietnam]] and [[China]]. The snack has also been particularly successful in [[Pakistan]], India, Vietnam and [[Taiwan]]. Additionally, it has become a favorite snack of North Korean workers at the [[Kaesong Industrial Complex]] and has come to symbolize [[capitalism]].<ref>{{cite news|author=Donald Kirk |url=http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Korea/KE21Dg01.html |title=Pyongyang chokes on sweet capitalism |publisher=Asia Times Online |date=21 May 2009 |accessdate=30 December 2009}}</ref> In 2010, ''[[The Chosun Ilbo]]'' reported that Choco Pies could fetch as much as US$9.50 on the North Korean black market.<ref>{{cite news |publisher=Chosun Ilbo |url=http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2010/01/12/2010011200624.html| title=Choco Pie Rules Black Market in N.Korea |date=12 January 2010 |accessdate=15 January 2010}}</ref>

Exports of Choco Pie to North Korea have been very popular, with the snack used in lieu of hard cash in paying North Korean Worker bonuses (cash being forbidden). As of 2013, in the wake of the shutdown of the Kaesung industrial complex, the price of a Choco Pie in North Korea skyrocketed, with the snack being the subject of financial speculation.<ref>http://www.dailynk.com/english/read.php?cataId=nk01500&num=10990</ref>

== Legal feud ==
In [[South Korea]], there was a legal feud in 1999 between Tongyang Confectionery (currently, [[Orion Confectionery]]) and another confectionery company, [[Lotte Confectionery]], concerning the name "Choco Pie". While Orion was the first company to start selling products under the name "Choco Pie", other confectionery companies, Lotte being the first, closely followed and started selling similar products labelled "Choco Pie". After many years of sales of different "Choco Pie" products, Tongyang filed a lawsuit against Lotte, claiming the name was their intellectual property, which was unsuccessful. The court said Tongyang was responsible for having allowed the name to become, over time, a "common noun".<ref name="ChosunIlbo">{{cite news |publisher=Chosun Ilbo |url=http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/1999/08/05/1999080561428.html |date=5 August 1999 |accessdate=4 September 2012 |title="Choco Pie" is a "Common Noun"}}</ref>

== References ==
{{Reflist}}

== External links ==
* [http://members.forbes.com/global/2006/0227/026A.html Forbes article on the Choco Pie and Orion's growth]
*

{{Snack cakes}}
{{Chocolate}}

[[Category:Confectionery]]
[[Category:American cuisine]]

Revision as of 06:55, 9 May 2014

꺼져라. 씨발놈아.