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Posted

Oscar Madison called it "tomato wine."

I love it. I love it on everything. I splosh it on my burgers. I plosh it on my vindaloo. I mosh it into my ice cream. I splorge it on my morning cereal. I squeeze it over corn, under towers of steak tartare, around store-bought pastry-puffs of mushroom and crab, and into doughnuts because what's jelly anyway but a misguided attempt at fruit-ketchup. I drench it on broccoli and quench my thirst with it. I've done away with Crest in favor of Heinzing my teeth every morning. 57 varieties for 30 teeth. I've filled my jacuzzi with a delightfully sweet tomotao froth.

Some people think ketchup should be banned. That's crazy talk if you ask me.

What say we petition the government to declare Ketchup the truly American food (hamburger and frankfurter sound too tuetonic for such an honor).

Posted

In the July 3, 2002 edition of the NYT ("Shameless Secrets of the Chefs", by Amanda Hesser), there is a reference to the use of ketchup at Cello and AZ in NY:

"At Cello, the pancetta-wrapped ahi tuna and foie gras . . . The base of the foamy sauce splashed across the plate is Heinz ketchup. Laurent Tourondel, the chef, squeezes it from a plastic bottle into a pan and caramelizes it. The sauce is then built by adding soy sauce, balsamic vinegar and ginger juice. It is thickened with cold butter, whisked in a little at a time. For years the trend in cooking was toward from-scratch absolutism, but now some chefs seem to be loosening up. Mr. Tourondel and Ms. [Patricia] Yeo, for example, have plenty of prep cooks to whip up some ketchup or fetch some caramel. . . . 'Ketchup,' she added, 'is a huge part of our peanut sauces. It has just the right sweetness and acidity.' . . ." :wink:

Posted

Of course not.

You elicit a comparison between a food lover and a food snob. You may consider it’s use mundane and insipid but you are a minority in this category. What’s next ? Ban crunchy peanut butter, B-movies,

You can pass on the Ketchup but some may not.

PS - Ketchup does not make kids fat - Parents do

Posted

Ketchup is helpful with most burgers and even good french fries (which I would subjectively take with a bit of fleur de sel only). Also, onion rings. To clarify my prior post, I was hoping to convey that ketchup has many uses beyond just burgers and fries. :blink:

Oh, to clarify, I use good old Heinz, in a squeeze bottle.

Posted
Oh, to clarify, I use good old Heinz, in a squeeze bottle.

It is the squeeze bottle that should be banned. Detracts from the "whole-ketchup" experience. Like a screw cap on a bottle of wine. Takes away the ritual. Makes it too easy.

As Heinz has said, it is all in the "anticipation" - those character building moments when the food is sitting in front of you screaming to be consumed but the ketchup has yet to have left the bottle.

Holly Moore

"I eat, therefore I am."

HollyEats.Com

Twitter

Posted

Not to mention a good rendition of homemade ketchup at Home Restaurant on Cornelia Street, in Greenwich Village.

And then, there's also banana ketchup, from the Philippines.

Shame on you...

=P

SA

Posted
As Heinz has said, it is all in the "anticipation" - those character building moments when the food is sitting in front of you screaming to be consumed but the ketchup has yet to have left the bottle.

Holly -- That's precisely why I like the squeeze bottle. If there is a restaurant I would like to sample, I attempt to go sample it. The same with dishes; I dislike waiting for the ketchup pour when the item is before me. :hmmm: I do not necessarily anticipate visiting new restaurants because I doubt their cuisine would be to my liking. I might be curious and still go, but the anticipation of a lyrical experience is not generally there (even in France, in almost every instance). I'm open to having such an experience, and seek to capture it when available. However, there is no real "anticipation" of something extraordinary when I visit new restaurants. :sad: Perhaps, prior to going to El Bulli and some of the Spanish three-stars, I might feel that sense of anticipation?

Even though I may not anticipate anything special, it's wonderful when one identifies a restaurant that one finds special, like Blue Hill (in the context of the US). Perhaps that's the only restaurant (apart from the old Bouley) that I experienced it in the US. Note I have not eaten at Charlie Trotter's.

Posted

No ,no, no a thousand times no. Ban Ketchup? Do we next ban fois gras? What about camembert? Do we eliminate crab? Do we abolish Cabernet Franc (sorry tommy).

No let ketchup live. If for no other reason, it's a great ingredient in BBQ sauce.

Cabby - I'm with you, nothing else but Heinz.

Rich Schulhoff

Opinions are like friends, everyone has some but what matters is how you respect them!

Posted
No let ketchup live. If for no other reason, it's a great ingredient in BBQ sauce.

Cabby - I'm with you, nothing else but Heinz.

Yes indeed. But I've switched to Muir Glen ketchup for Q sauce - a bit less sweet and more acidic than Heinz.

For french fries etc., Heinz it is.

Posted
Should we call for a ban?

Are you kidding? Shame on you two times.

A burger without ketchup? That's like my grandmother being dressed for Sunday services without an outrageous hat--it's not possible.

I do prefer my Heinz 57 in the short, restaurant glass bottle.

Posted

No. I need it for the cocktail sauce for shrimp.

-- Jeff

"I don't care to belong to a club that accepts people like me as members." -- Groucho Marx

Posted

Banana ketchup is made from pretty much the same stuff as regular tomato ketchup except that the primary ingredient is mashed ripe bananas. The version I'm familiar with also contains tomatoes, primarily for use as a coloring agent. Its sweeter and spicier than your usual tomato ketchup, not as tangy, and a little more mellow.

Try it one of these days, and let me know. Remind me to bring a bottle at the vertical tasting, whenever that is.

SA

Posted

Dstone,

Try mixing in 50% addition of Louisiana Hot Sauce to the ketchup. The result is quite nice for fries. Cuts the sweetness and adds a little zip of heat and earthiness. I likey.

Posted
Letting children pour it on anything does little more than help them develop a sweet-tooth which will make them fat down the road.

oh please. if that were the case, everyone on in the US would be fat.

Posted
Dstone,

Try mixing in 50% addition of Louisiana Hot Sauce to the ketchup.  The result is quite nice for fries.  Cuts the sweetness and adds a little zip of heat and earthiness.  I likey.

ron, that sounds good! I'm going to try it. :wink: I think that would also taste great on hashbrowns, too.

Love ketchup on (homemade) cold meatloaf sandwiches...yum!

Posted

i mix thai chili sauce, which is sweet and spicy, with ketchup when i'm have something that needs a little more than ketchup.

ketchup is a great produce. although its aggressive sweetness that turns some off, it has acidity, sweetness, spiciness, and color. it can be used in cooking as well as as a condiment. i like ketchup.

Posted
i mix thai chili sauce, which is sweet and spicy, with ketchup when i'm have something that needs a little more than ketchup.

tommy, what types of things do you serve with your sweet chili sauce/ketchup combo? (I'm looking for new ideas). :wink: I am very fond of Thai sweet chili sauce, especially with grilled or even roasted chicken.

Posted

Why not ban yogurt while you're at it. It is sour, goppy, tastes bad and looks horrible spilled in your lap. Ban ketchup? Are you serious?

Posted
tommy,  what types of things do you serve with your sweet chili sauce/ketchup combo? (I'm looking for new ideas).    :wink:   I am very fond of Thai sweet chili sauce, especially with grilled or even roasted chicken.

well, i serve it with french fries. :smile:

also, i mix ketchup, store bought bbq sauce (at little), sriracha, thai chili sauce, and lime juice for grilled pork chops. it's so easy and just adds so much to grilled pork. hell, i've served it spooned over a grilled pork loin as well.

thai chili sauce looks like this, but not as blurry. thaigrocer.com carries it for all of you people living in culturally challenged areas. :wink:

SC0301xl.jpg

Posted

At least we're not proclaiming it as a vegetable. Can't remember who did that, either Reagan (during his second term) or Bush.

The horror, the horror!

SA

Posted
At least we're not proclaiming it as a vegetable.  Can't remember who did that, either Reagan (during his second term) or Bush.

The horror, the horror!

SA

I believe ketchup has lypocene though, which I've read helps prevent prostate cancer.

thanks tommy, for the sweet chili sauce/ketchup combo ideas.

Posted
At least we're not proclaiming it as a vegetable.  Can't remember who did that, either Reagan (during his second term) or Bush.

The horror, the horror!

SA

Horror ?

The Ketchup or Reagan-Bush... I bet I can guess your answer

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