Tony Winters Says Edinburgh Ketchup Charge Is 'Racist' In Saucegate Row

Ketchup, A Surprisingly Racial Issue

Scotland's sauce wars have escalated. A chip shop owner has found himself embroiled in a racism row after charging a Glaswegian 25p for a small sachet of Heinz tomato sauce.

Tony Winters went to Trading Standards after being charged for the sachet at the Gold Sea chippy in Leith, arguing he was a victim of discrimination because the shop gave locals brown sauce for free.

Red or brown? Ketchup has sparked a racism row

Mr Winters, who has lived in Edinburgh for 18 years, complained: “Every chip shop I know gives ketchup free of charge. A condiment is a condiment.”

“You can’t offer one customer brown sauce for nothing then charge another for tomato. I told the staff I thought it was racist. They just said it’s what they do," the Daily Record reported.

“It reeks of racism – just because we come from the west and tend to like ketchup instead of brown sauce.

“It’s clear they’re discriminating and I don’t think it’s right.”

Mr Winters was so offended over the condiment controversy that he left the shop without paying - and without his food.

But shop owner Paul Crolla defended his decision, highlighting an ancient grudge that has divided Edinburgh and Glasgow since the dawn of fast food.

He told the Edinburgh Evening News: “Salt and sauce goes with fish and chips. Anything extra should be paid for.

“If it was up to me I wouldn’t give anyone ketchup because it ruins the whole thing.

“Fish and chips is an Edinburgh thing and people want salt and sauce on it. That’s the tradition.”

He added: “I don’t know how the guy can cry racism because I ask for 25p for Heinz off all my customers, not just those from Glasgow.”

Trading Standards said the Gold Sea had no case to answer, and it was up to traders to decide whether to charge for sauce.

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