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by erock 4866 days ago
living in the town where Heinz was founded (Pittsburgh, PA) brand loyalty can get a little over the top, we look down on anyplace that doesn't have Heinz ketchup, and years ago when I live in the bay area, I chastised a restaurant because i knew (I just knew!) they watered down the ketchup. Come on, I'm from Pittsburgh, I know my Heinz
2 comments

I suppose one interesting thing about brands (or perhaps just Heinz) is that we assume they're local. I would have said Heinz was a British company, no question. Likewise with Kelloggs.
Kelloggs' biggest factory is in the UK, but it has something of a strange American history: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kelloggs#History
for more in depth history, check out this book https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Road_to_Wellville
and the quality film.
well, we can't get spotted dick here (really we can if you look hard enough(also, i only take pictures of the can to send to friends)), but heinz was founded in Pittsburgh.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H._J._Heinz_Company

Which has interesting results when the parent company changes a name from Marathon to Snickers.

(I agree about the Britishness of Heinz and Kelloggs. It's only in the past ten years that I realised they weren't.)

As an aside, I grew up very close to a Scottish castle owned by a member of the Heinz family.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawthornden_Castle

We do eat something like 95% of all baked beans they produce, however.
I have found the same thing about Kraft in Philly.
Try to take away Tastykake from Philly.