not technically helpful...
Nov. 23rd, 2004 02:22 pmI 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.)
Re: response from Butterball
Date: 2004-11-25 02:44 am (UTC)Of course butter would have to mentioned as an allergen. I should have thought of that. A common occurrence in internet communication- getting caught up in the superficial question (Why is it called "butterball"?) and losing sight of the important element ("Is Cellio going to have a problem with her parents' turkey"?). A great example here (http://www.livejournal.com/users/experimentego/180374.html), if anyone has the time to read it.