I been toying in my mind how to characterize my participation in this ketchup tasting. Some doubts were largely influenced by an article I read the night before on focus groups. It suggested focus groups tend to choose what�s familiar to them over what�s different to their experience. Possibly bypassing innovation or an improvement because it challenges their known frame of reference.
Translated into the context of a ketchup taste-off. It made me wonder out loud were we tasting the ketchups to find one which most meets our traditional expectations or were we able to look beyond what we expect to what is best. When I ranked the ketchups, I went with what I really liked rather than what I thought a ketchup should taste like. So my top rank was the curry ketchup.
In a sense, we did have a ringer in the ketchup competitors: my submission of the Heinz EZ Squirt (Awesome Orange) ketchup, which not only looked different (like very soft dog poop), it was instantly known to Hammond, ReneG and I as the Heinz product. It was truly fortuitous JeffB came to taste it independently and declare, though it looked strange, it did taste like ketchup.
EZ Squirt not only had a unique look, I used the less than smooth appearance to delineate which other ketchup was the classic Heinz. Biased? Yes, certainly all tasting and focus groups are inherently filled with bias. I simply admit to mine. Also take into account, what has Heinz always pushed in their ads: so rich and thick the ketchup barely moves. A lot of the ketchups had glossy smooth appearances, whereas one had a similar rough texture and dull sheen which number 9: Muir Glen had. It was a very good ketchup, but in my search for the outstanding ketchup taste experience it didn�t place number 1 (it placed 4th) because in a sense I was trying not to choose what was absolutely familiar unless it was an outstanding example. JeffB also believed the Muir Glen was the Heinz.
Another easy-to-identify was number 10, the ketchup I made. I hadn�t made ketchup in a few years, so I forgot some of the nuances of making it. Though the instructions suggest it only needs one hour of simmering, well it needs much more. In my Last-Minute-Lulu mode, I made this ketchup Sunday morning and didn�t have the time to reduce it down to the right consistency. I brought the recipe and the sauce, while watery by ketchup standards, was still a work in progress. I did reduce it on Monday. It looks a lot like ketchup sample 9 from Muir Glen.
Some ketchups were so foreign to my remotest expectations of ketchup, they were easy to taste once and move one. Number 6 had Jalapeno overtones and a heat level I could tolerate, no surprise it was Ketchapeno. Number 8 had a high level of heat by my wimpy standards. Chili seeds were visible. This ketchup was dark with spices. My head jerked when I sample this sauce aptly named Eaton�s Original Jamaican Jamaican Jerk Tomato. Another ketchup one would have thought was in the easy to detect spicey category was number 3: Jufran Banana Sauce. This was more nuanced rather than attack the tongue spicey. I could eat with fries quite comfortably.
My third choice was not on the tasting tubs, rather it was the house ketchup from Kevin�s: Red Gold. This was really thick and difficult to shake out of the jar. It had that rough, dull sheen red texture seen in Muir Glen, Heinz EZ Squirt and my finished ketchup. There was also a strong tomato paste taste present. It met my expectations of a classic ketchup.
In the glossy ketchup category, in some you could see specs of ground spices. In others there was a homogeneous red color, albeit a wide variety of red shading. The outstanding characteristic of sample number 2 was not only the bright red color, the ketchup held soft peaks. This ability to hold a shape suggested there were some thickening agents in there. It also had an almost too perfect glossy look, like a premium ketchup wannabe. Much to my chagrin this was Heinz, which ironically didn�t match my frame of reference for classic tomato ketchup.
So even though I was full of biases and assumed frame of references, the results still had surprises for me. What seemed like a frivolous exercise in chasing nuances nobody cares about, we learned a lot about these ketchups and, in my case, myself.
Hammond and Rene G, I cannot wait for the water taste off.
If you note, I did not specify which product was my choice number 2. I simply cannot remember which one it was.