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Date: | Thu, 28 Mar 2002 12:40:12 -0500 |
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If you missed this one in the complex and amusing discussion of food,
Southerns etc. take a look at it. Ned has an interesting point here.
At 06:28 AM 3/28/2002 -0500, you wrote:
>When we were researching a site where catsup was bottled, we found a
>newspaper account that remarked on the "hot" nature of the product.
>To palates accustomed to Heinz red bland sauce, a reference to catsup
>as "hot" was surprising and not a little distressing.
>
>To solve the puzzle, we compared modern and nineteenth-century catsup
>recipes. Sure enough, nineteenth-century catsup was a hot sauce, not
>a vegetable (as the Reagan Maladministration tried to classify it).
>Nineteenth-century catsup bottles resembled the modern ones, but the
>product was different. Product recognition through traditional
>container shapes is an important marketing concept, but it doesn't
>necessarily mean that the product has been constant through time.
>
>This realization led to insertion of catsup recipes in our report on
>the Collins Geddes cannery, which was published with a perfectly
>straight face by DelDOT.
>--
>*****[log in to unmask]****************************
>* Democracy is a system of government that *
>* entitles us to be led by alternating packs *
>* of idiots, bigots, and egomaniacs. At any *
>* given moment, we are suffering under the *
>* oppressive rule of the worst. *
>**********************************************
>
Robert L. Schuyler
University of Pennsylvania Museum
33rd & Spruce Streets
Philadelphia, PA l9l04-6324
Tel: (215) 898-6965
Fax: (215) 898-0657
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