cellio: (garlic)
[personal profile] cellio
I was trying to find out if Butterball turkeys actually contain butter, so I went to their web site. I could find nothing about ingredients/additives on the site, but I found this in the "about us" section: "In fact, the Butterball name was chosen to characterize a new, special breed of broad-breasted white feather turkeys, not because the turkeys contain butter, as many mistakenly believe."

Just a few more words could have removed the ambiguity. So it's a mistake to believe that the turkeys contain butter, or (what this technically says) that it's a mistake to believe that their name has anything to do with the possible presence of butter? Having failed to disambiguate with the resources they provide, I sent them email.

Odd detail: while they have a domain name (the obvious one, in fact), customer support has an AOL address.

Update: Reply received; no butter. (See comments.)

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-24 02:09 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sue-n-julia.livejournal.com
Try using sage and garlic instead of butter under the skin for a taste treat. Or, stuff under the skin with stuffing instead of in the body. The stuffing is a little drier and stiffer, but *very* tasty.

S

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