Updated
Updated · Fox News · May 31
Colonel Sanders Called KFC Gravy 'Wallpaper Paste,' Triggering 1978 Lawsuit
Updated
Updated · Fox News · May 31

Colonel Sanders Called KFC Gravy 'Wallpaper Paste,' Triggering 1978 Lawsuit

3 articles · Updated · Fox News · May 31
  • 1978 court records show Colonel Harland Sanders blasted KFC's gravy as "horrible" and likened it to "wallpaper paste" after recipe changes made following his 1964 sale of the chain.
  • Sanders said the revised gravy was made from cheap water, flour and starch, lacked nutrition, and no longer matched the quality of the original version he had served.
  • A Bowling Green, Kentucky, franchise sued Sanders and the Courier-Journal over the remarks, but the case was dismissed and the Kentucky Supreme Court upheld that ruling because he criticized KFC generally, not that outlet specifically.
  • Decades later, the gravy still has a loyal following, with online fans split between defending it as comfort food and arguing Sanders-era gravy used a richer recipe with cracklings, milk and cream.
Why did KFC's founder publicly call his own famous gravy 'wallpaper paste'?
How did a legal battle allow Colonel Sanders to publicly criticize his former company?
What was the secret to Colonel Sanders' original gravy recipe that KFC abandoned?