Wednesday, June 24, 2020

A Ballpark Favorite Comes Home

In normal times people would be sitting at their favorite ballparks, having their beers and a bag of salted peanuts. However , the only time you can get peanuts now is at home. Has the lock down affected this american classic? Yes and no.

Regular contributor Kim Severson wrote about this summer time favorite in today's New York Times Food section. Roasted peanuts have been popular at games for the last 125 years. Yet with most of the venues closed, the nuts have been languishing in storage or orders from peanut farmers have been cancelled. Roasted peanuts are an expensive deal. Unlike pretzels and hot dogs, other ballpark standards, they have to be bred to be the perfect size for the roasting process. The plants are expensive to grow and delicate to harvest. Of course the shell has to be perfect as well which adds to its' appetizing looks. How did peanuts become connected to baseball? It all started in the 1890's when British born Harry Stevens moved to Ohio and fell in love with the game. He designed and sold its' first scorecards with the slogan "You can't tell the players without a scorecard." Enter a peanut company, Cavagnaros traded bags of peanuts for advertising  space.on the cards One hundred years later the Aramark company which produces nine million bags (!) of peanuts a season.  When Jack Norwith wrote "Take Me Out To The Ballgame" in 1908 , the marriage of baseball and peanuts were well wed.

Roasting peanuts have a special flavor as fans will tell you . They are the divas of the field, with delicate shells that are prone to cracking. Picking them requires care according to peanut farmer Dan Ward, of Clarkton, North Carolina. They also have to be planted in loamy soil. There was also calculating how many to plant for the 2021 baseball season. Yet what about all those companies that bought those roasters . It turned out there was a rise in sales in March. Roasted peanuts started to sell out at Wal-Mart and other retailers. It could be that people wanted to try roasting them themselves or create the Instagram cute squirrel "restaurants" where tiny picnic tables and tiny bowls of  raw shelled nuts are left out for squirrels to feast on. In May, there was another boost. shelled Virginias, so named because they're grown in the state had a fifteen per cent boost in sales. The reason was that all those cans bought in March were now gone. sales have been steady. Even steadier were peanut butter sales. It went into a lot of sandwiches but even more sobering more was bought up by  FEMA and Feeding America to fill out food boxes for the needy.Yet the Virginia peanuts are not being dumped into the grinders, only the runner beans. It would be cost ineffective to grind up the best nuts according to Tom Nolan the vice president  for sales and marketing at Hampton Farms, the North Carolina peanut company.

You can't go to the ballgames these days but you can still have  roasted peanuts. They're delicious no matter what. Have a bag and celebrate all those future season with them.