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History of Mr's BALL'S
CHUTNEY The Romantic
Version
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The
name chutney was adopted from a Hindi word in India, chatni,
meaning ‘made from fresh fruit and spices”. In South Africa
chutney mainly used as a marinade and a sauce to accompany
meat, curries and bobotie.
Although Mrs. Ball’s chutney is considered to
be a truly South African product, the chutney recipe, in reality,
comes from Canada.
In 1865 Mrs. Ball was
born as Amelia Alice Elizabeth Adkins in Fort Jackson , East
London, the same town where her Canadian parents were stranded
in 1852 on their way to Australia.
According to the Ball Family Records her
father, Henry James Adkins, captain of the SS Quanza, and his wife,
Sarah Spalding, left the coastal town, Nova Scotia in Canada for
Australia. Although the boat was lost off the coast of East London,
fortunately for future generations of South Africans, the captain,
his wife and her chutney recipe survived.
It was here that their daughter, Amelia
Adkins, was born thirteen years later. She married Herbert
Saddleton Ball in Fort Jackson, and was thereafter known as Mrs.
Ball.
Both Mrs. Ball and her sister, Florence
(known as Aunt Flo) received the secret chutney recipe from their
mother, who in turn got it from her mother. Aunt Flo also made the
exact same chutney recipe - which she sold as Mrs. Adkins’ Chutney
- the only difference being that almost no one bought
it.
Edward Thomas Adkins Ball, Mrs. Ball’s
grandson, explained that the difference in the recipes might have
been in the sugar.
Mrs. Ball started making the chutney after
she moved to Johannesburg with her husband and seven children. Her
friends and family loved it so much that their chutney business
started blossoming on its own. As the demand increased; Mrs Ball
cooked the chutney and her husband bottled.
Home Industries started selling her chutney and by 1918 she sold
about 24 bottles a day, which in the years to come grew to 8 000
bottles of chutney a day.
In 1921 the Ball family moved to Cape Town.
After living in Kalk Bay and Diepriver they settled in Plumstead
(where her husband took over the chutney cooking).
He died in 1935 and she moved to Fish Hoek
where she continued to make chutney in her backyard with the help
of her grandson, “Uncle Bob”. The business was later moved to
Woodstock with twelve new workers.
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The Ball Family
Crest
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In 1957/’58 Mrs Ball’s chutney was exported
to England for the first time .
In the early seventies, Brooke Bond Oxo
bought over the business, which was later sold to Unifoods. Still
owned by them today, Mrs. Ball’s chutney is being made in
Johannesburg and exported to Germany, Britain, New Zealand and
Australia and the USA.
Mrs. Ball died on 20 November 1962 at the age
of 97. Uncle Bob believes she would have lived to see 100 if she
wasn’t attacked a few years earlier. Apparently three youths
assaulted her for a small purse of money while she was sitting on
the stoep/Front deck of her house in Fish Hoek. They threw her to
the ground, and, unable to get up by herself, she was found lying
there sometime later.
She could not be buried next to her husband
in Plumstead due to rising water levels. Instead she was buried in
Muizenberg, where her grave can still be visited today.a

Mrs Balls House in Fish Hoek
For The Romantic History Version Click Here
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