A Black man created ranch dressing — and most people never knew.
Kenneth “Steve” Henson, born in Nebraska in 1918, was a plumber who cooked for his crew in Alaska. One day he mixed buttermilk, mayo, herbs, and spices… and ranch was born.
In 1954, he and his wife bought land near Santa Barbara and named it Hidden Valley Ranch. Guests loved the dressing so much they begged to take jars home. By 1957, stores were selling his dry mix. Orders exploded. Factories followed.
In 1972, Clorox bought the recipe and the name for eight million dollars. Ranch went nationwide. By 1992, it was America’s #1 dressing.
But the man behind it? Nearly erased.
Every salad, every wing, every fry dipped in ranch — that’s his legacy. He mattered. He was the blueprint.
. ❤️💛💚🖤
You think Wemby's run is impressive?
In June of 2011, JJ Barea—5 and a half feet tall—locked down LeBron James in the Finals and impregnated Miss Universe. We may never see another run like that.
Farmer pays $5–$8 per cow per month.
A New Zealand company puts a solar-powered smart collar on cows.
It tracks location 24/7, health, temperature, chewing activity, breeding.
Farmer just opens a simple app and draws a line on the map.
That line becomes the fence.
As cows approach the boundary, the collar beeps and vibrates.
With one tap, the whole herd moves to fresh grass or the milking shed.
No physical fences. Less labor. Huge cost savings for farmer.
Already on 700k cows across New Zealand, Australia, and the US.
and now in talks to raise at a $2B valuation led by Peter Thiel.