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Pure Ketchup: A History of America's National Condiment
 
 

Pure Ketchup: A History of America's National Condiment (Paperback)

by Andrew F. Smith (Author) "Just south of downtown Collinsville on Illinois Route 159, a seventy-foot steel ketchup bottle stands atop a one hundred-foot tower ..." (more)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 242 pages
  • Publisher: Smithsonian Books; New edition edition (April 2001)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1560989939
  • ISBN-13: 978-1560989936
  • Product Dimensions: 22.7 x 15.2 x 1.7 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 2,184,536 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

Product Description

Synopsis

For topping French fries or cottage cheese, K rations or school lunches, ketchup has long been an American favourite. In this volume, Andrew F. Smith chronicles American milestones in ketchup history, including colonial adaptations of popular British mushroom, anchovy and walnut ketchups, the rise of tomato-based ketchup, the proliferation of commercial bottling after the Civil War, debates over preservatives, the resurgence of home-made and designer varieties, and a recent challenge from salsa. He also includes 110 historical recipes.

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Just south of downtown Collinsville on Illinois Route 159, a seventy-foot steel ketchup bottle stands atop a one hundred-foot tower. Read the first page
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars I say, can I get some chips with this ketchup?, 21 Nov 2002
By Joseph Haschka (Glendale, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)   
According to some arcane device called the Bostwick Consistometer ("Oh, honey, what happened to that old Bostwick we used to have in the attic?"), ketchup "cannot flow faster than fourteen centimeters in thirty seconds at twenty degrees centigrade". Author Andrew Smith, while citing this fact in PURE KETCHUP, fails to say if this is on a downhill slope or level straightaway. I guess I'll have to conduct my own experiments.

This book is otherwise a fascinating and fact filled history of the condiment that only an un-American subversive would fail to gobble up with fries. Starting with the origin of the word - "kecap" (Indonesia), "kę-tsiap" (Vietnam?), "escaveche" (France), "iskebęy" (Arab) - Smith describes the evolution of ketchup, or catchup, or catsup, from the old days in Europe, when it was made from everything imaginable (grapes, cucumbers, walnuts, oysters, cherries, mushrooms, apples, apricots, gooseberries, currants, anchovies, cranberries), to the present, when it's a distinctly American food made from tomatoes.

In the chapter on the growth of the U.S. ketchup industry in the nineteenth century, the author goes to extreme lengths to name seemingly all the manufacturers of the period and every brand name they marketed. Smith followed the same course in his book on popcorn, POPPED CULTURE. I continue to regard his commendable attention to such detail excessive, but I shan't dwell on it here because I liked PURE KETCHUP more than the other anyway. The best chapter, for me, was the lengthiest one, which describes the bitter battle between pure-food adherents advocating the manufacture of ketchup without preservatives and those espousing the use of such, specifically benzoates. The two camps flailed away at each other for years to the point that even the eventual victor staggered away exhausted. The story of this acrimony might just as well illustrate the course of any debate over food additives or processing, whether it's MSG, aspartame, food irradiation, or the looming conflict over the fat and calorie content of fast foods. As for me, I'm perfectly happy to find the ketchup with the highest content of preservatives, pour it on the biggest order of chips I can buy, and thumb my nose at the Nutrition Gestapo while I chow down.

For me, perhaps the major fault of PURE KETCHUP is that it failed to mention, much less define, the place of barbecue and steak sauces in the genealogy of ketchup, if indeed they're related. I was in the supermarket today, and the brands of barbecue sauce far outnumber those of ketchup, and the labels of all I checked included a tomato derivative. So, what about those Andy? (Since Smith and I exchanged friendly emails concerning POPPED CULTURE, perhaps he'll read this and enlighten me.)

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