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Mrs BALLS CHUTNEY
HISTORY
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As Told By Mrs Balls Grandson Desmond
Ball.
Desmond Ball, the great-grandson of Mrs HS Ball, sells chutney
made from her original recipe at produce markets around Cape
Town.(Image: Jennifer Stern)
The commercially produced Mrs HS Ball’s Chutney comes
in five flavours: original, hot, tomato, and peach.
Desmond Ball’s chutneys are
named after his great-grandmother, Amelia.
For South Africans abroad, there’s nothing quite like the taste
of the mother country to bring on a wave of homesickness. Ouma
rusks, Chappies bubble gum, biltong and boerewors are all sold in
speciality shops across the world for the South African expat
community. And probably the most iconic taste of all is that of Mrs
HS Ball’s Chutney. Manufactured in Johannesburg and exported to the
UK, Australia, New Zealand and Germany, the chutney is a slightly
sweet and spicy sauce made from apricots and peaches.
It’s an essential accompaniment to a good curry or braai, it’s
great on cheese sandwiches, and bobotie is unthinkable without
it.
Like many icons, it has its mythology, not all of which is true.
According to Desmond Ball, the great-grandson of the original Mrs
HS Ball, the real story is a little different from the version to
be found on Unilever’s website.
According to Ball, it all started in 1852 when Henry James
Adkins married Elizabeth Sarah Spalding in King William’s Town,
settling in the nearby village of Fort Jackson to run a general
dealership. He was a pretty humble man, Desmond says, not a ship’s
captain, as the Unilever website claims, and the couple were never
romantically shipwrecked together.
Sarah Adkins started making chutney commercially in about 1870. But
she was no great shakes at brand-building, burdening her delicious
condiment with the label, “Mrs Henry Adkins Senior, Colonial
Chutney Manufacturer, Fort Jackson, Cape Colony.”
The Adkinses had seven sons and four daughters, one of whom was
Amelia. Amelia married Herbert Saddleton Ball, a superintendent on
the railways, and they moved to Johannesburg - taking her mother’s
chutney recipe with her.
On HS Ball’s retirement the family moved to Cape Town, where
Amelia started producing her mother’s chutney on a home-industry
scale.
“She was a tough old cookie,” says Desmond. “She had seven
children, Herbert Saddleton Junior, Thomas, Clemm, Henry (who was
called Harry), Harold (who was not called Harry), Ernest, and
Mildred - the only daughter. Thomas died young.”
The Balls moved to the pretty coastal town of Fish Hoek,
building or buying four houses within walking distance of each
other. Mr and Mrs Ball senior lived in one, and sons Harold, Harry
and Ernest in the others with their families. Here Mrs Ball started
increasing her production. Meanwhile, her sister Florence and
brother Harold carried on making Adkins Chutney, which they had
inherited from their mother.
“It caused quite a lot of strife,” says Desmond. “Here were
these two sisters, both making chutney, in direct competition with
each other.”
The
power of marketing
Amelia’s husband would take a few bottles every day by train
into Cape Town to sell. It was on one of these sales trips that he
met Fred Metter, a food importer. Metter started marketing the
chutney, and improved sales so much that production could not be
accommodated in the Fish Hoek house. The factory was moved three
times, each time to bigger premises, eventually ending up in Diep
River.
The youngest son, Herbert Saddleton Junior, sold his share of
the business to Metter, who again increased sales to such an extent
that the factory moved for the last time to bigger premises in
Retreat. But it remained a family business, with the three brothers
Harry, Harold and Ernest retaining their share.
“I used to go to the factory and work in the holidays,” says
Desmond Ball. “Edward Ball, my uncle, was the manager. He is now
82. And he made chutney from the time he left school. That’s all he
ever did.
“In those days we only made the original recipe. There was only one
flavour. But my uncle Harry liked things with a bit of a bite. I
remember him crushing a chilli and putting it into the chutney to
make it a bit hotter and that’s how Mrs Ball’s Hot Chutney came
about.
“Then Fred Metter decided that peach chutney would sell,” says
Desmond Ball. “So we added that to the line-up. It’s milder and
sweeter.
“When the main shareholders started getting on a bit, they sold
the business to Brooke Bond Oxo, who later sold it to Unilever
Foods, who still own the brand today.”
Meantime Florence and Harold had sold Adkins Chutney to Warne
Bros, who later sold it to Iona Products, and it finally went out
of production in the 1970s. It was all a question of marketing.
Same recipe, same chutney, but different brands. Adkins has been
lost to memory, and Mrs Ball’s is a household name across the
world.
Mrs Amelia Balls House in
Fishoek 
Desmond Ball still lives near Fish Hoek, where, he says, “People
would stop me in the street and say the chutney doesn’t taste the
same. They’ve changed the recipe.
“We’ve been making chutney for five generations, and I want to
keep the family tradition alive,” he says.
Giving in to the demands of his neighbours, Desmond Ball dug up
the old family recipe, kept from his days working in the factory as
a boy, and started manufacturing on a small scale and selling it at
the Porter Estate Produce Market in Tokai and the Triangle Market
in Fish Hoek.
“I make the original recipe, the hot and the peach,” he says.
“And I also make a hotter chilli one, too. People’s tastes have
changed and a lot of people like really hot stuff now.”
Desmond Ball has called his chutney Amelia’s Chutney, in honour
of his great-grandmother.
“A lot of people don’t realise she was a real live person,” he
says. “That’s why I’ve put her picture on my bottle, so people can
see what she looked like.”
Amelia Ball died on 11 November 1962, at the age of 97. But her
name lives on - on the millions of Mrs HS Ball’s Chutney labels,
and on the less ubiquitous Amelia’s Chutney. Her descendants are
determined to keep the legend alive.
Article taken from. http://www.homecomingrevolution.co.za
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