NickRac
11-04-2003, 11:53 PM
inspired by this thread: http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?s=&threadid=203877
Whats the difference between Fancy Ketchup and regular ketchup?
Whats the difference between Fancy Ketchup and regular ketchup?
![]() | View Full Version : Ketchup... NickRac 11-04-2003, 11:53 PM inspired by this thread: http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?s=&threadid=203877 Whats the difference between Fancy Ketchup and regular ketchup? LinuxAdmin 11-04-2003, 11:55 PM Originally posted by NickRac inspired by this thread: http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?s=&threadid=203877 Whats the difference between Fancy Ketchup and regular ketchup? Hey Nick, Whats the difference between starting a useless thread and not starting a useless thread ? :cartman: peersignal 11-05-2003, 12:03 AM I've never noticed a difference in taste...bland and tomatoey! (highly doubt that tomatoey is a word, but oh well) Regards, Mark John[H4Y] 11-05-2003, 02:24 AM What's the difference between fancy kethcup and fancy catsup? AKavanaugh 11-05-2003, 04:54 AM Originally posted by John[H4Y] What's the difference between fancy kethcup and fancy catsup? Spelling. Davros 11-05-2003, 01:23 PM I had thought 'Ketchup' was a trademark of Hienz and Catsup was the 'public domain' name. But an internet search proved that wrong.. Neither of the two names are trademarked. The most logical answer I could find is this from Straight Dope. http://www.straightdope.com/classics/a3_102a.html Dear Cecil: How come the bottled red stuff you see in stores is sometimes called ketchup and sometimes catsup? It all looks the same to me. --George Steinfeld, Dallas, Texas Cecil replies: There is an interesting answer for this, George, and then there is the real answer. The interesting answer is that our word ketchup, which originally meant a spicy fish sauce, comes from the Malay kechap, which Dutch traders transliterated as ketjap. But it turns out the Malays had borrowed the word from the Chinese ke-tsiap, which I gather sounds more like catsup. So you could argue that European merchants called their spicy fish sauce ketchup or catsup depending on whether they'd bought it in Malaya or China. Unfortunately, it appears the Chinese themselves had two versions of the word, ke-tsiap and koe-chiap. So the real answer, unless some 17th-century Chinese shows up to clarify things, is that we just don't know why there are two versions, there just are. As a kid I used to get mad when my father fed me that line, but I'm starting to understand how the old guy felt. --CECIL ADAMS Fancy is purly added by manufactures choice of words. Kimmikat 11-05-2003, 02:11 PM Adding: As for the little packet versions of fancy and non-fancy ketchup you get from fast-food places, they still pop the same when placed under a auto tire. :D Originally posted by NickRac inspired by this thread: http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?s=&threadid=203877 Whats the difference between Fancy Ketchup and regular ketchup? |