Tomato ketchup is different to tomato sauce? I had no idea, everything gets called tomato sauce here so I didn't know there was a distinction.
This is an oxymoron.So what's a good ketchup?
Best to support local products over international ones. Never buy Heinz for that reason, rather choose a company of the nation I reside in.
Is that different from regular Heinz Ketchup?
Now I want to try a brand considered Ketchup in Israel to compare to Heinz Ketchup to see which taste better.
Is that different from regular Heinz Ketchup?
Who the heck are these people in the thread that think tomato sauce and ketchup are remotely interchangeable?
Oh, let me go find a burger restaurant that has tomato sauce on hand. Hmm, I bet my favorite pasta place uses ketchup on sphagetti and I just wasn't refined enough to notice.
WHAT THE FUIICK
Who the heck are these people in the thread that think tomato sauce and ketchup are remotely interchangeable?
Oh, let me go find a burger restaurant that has tomato sauce on hand. Hmm, I bet my favorite pasta place uses ketchup on sphagetti and I just wasn't refined enough to notice.
WHAT THE FUIICK
The most common use of the term tomato sauce in New Zealand, Australia, South Africa and the United Kingdom is to describe a popular, commercially produced condiment, similar to American ketchup, typically applied to foods such as meat pies, sausages, other meats, and potato chips.[4] Tomato-based sauces served with pasta would commonly be referred to as "pasta sauce". In the UK the meaning of the term "tomato sauce" depends on the context; on a restaurant menu the phrase "in a tomato sauce" means a freshly prepared tomato based sauce as used on pasta, and colloquially it may refer to either the pasta sauce or American ketchup.
American tomato-flavored High Fructose Corn Syrup condiment is dreadful.
Huh, I never thought I'd hear myself say this, but I support what the Israeli government is doing.
This is not true. I grew up with Hellmann's ketchup, and when I tried Heinz this year I found it way better than the former. That's one thing I liked more about US Burger King than the local one, because on the flip side New Yorkers have to drink Coke when eating at BK instead of the superior Pepsi.honestly you probably wont like it as much, from what i can tell from my friends and such, the ketchup you eat when still a child is the one you will like more later in life.
you never know though, try some.
No you're not. Ketchup is for children. Adults should be using actual tomato sauce.
Heinz is tomato colored vinegar.
I wholeheartedly agree with this. I hope this approach to things starts finding it's way to North America.