

and have bannana flavoured crisps

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I'm happy to offer an outside source here, Adam.Adam wrote:
Someone correct me if im wrong but here is how i HEARD the story go:
Apprently during the second world war a devision or platoon or whatever group of soldiers had just potatoes, gravy, cheese curds.
Being creative, they made fries, put gravy on the potatoes and put cheese curds on it.
Thus we got poutine.
Now this could be seriously flawed 'history' so....
- WikipediaOrigins
The dish originated in rural Quebec, Canada in the late 1950s and is now popular all over the country, especially in New Brunswick. Several communities claim to be the origin of poutine, including Drummondville, Quebec (by Jean-Pierre Roy) and Victoriaville, Quebec. The most popular tale is the one of Fernand Lachance, from Warwick, Quebec, which claims that poutine was invented in 1957, when a customer ordered fries while waiting for his cheese curds from the Kingsey cheese factory in Kingsey Falls (now in Warwick and bought by Saputo). Lachance is said to have exclaimed ça va faire une maudite poutine ("it will make a hell of a mess"), hence the name. The sauce was allegedly added later, to keep the fries warm longer. Linguists have found no occurrence of the word poutine with this meaning earlier than 1978.
Not so- that was a bit of sensationalism in the media a few years ago. Sales of salsa did briefly have a higher gross- but salsa is more than twice as expensive per ounce than ketchup. In the US ketchup sells ~10 million ounces/year and climbing compared to ~4 million for salsa (Forbes.com).The ketchup thing in the states is huge. Partly because all the big burger franchises offer it. Ketchup is now outsold by salsa though.