Honey Bear Alphabet Pasta 250g
Alphabet pasta, also referred to as alfabeto and alphabetti spaghetti, is a pasta that has been mechanically cut or pressed into the letters of the alphabet. It is often served in an alphabet soup, sold in a can of condensed broth. Another variation, Alphagetti, consists of letter-shaped pasta in a marinara or spaghetti sauce.
It is not clear who invented alphabet soup, or when. As early as 1877, Paris grocers sold “…small bits of macaroni, for use in soup, which are stamped with… the letters of the alphabet.” and Paris restaurants served “…delicious soups made of macaroni or vermicelli cut up into the shape of letters of the alphabet…” In 1883, The Chicago Herald Cooking School cookbook provide a recipe for soup calling for a small pasta such as “alphabet pastes of the same material as macaroni stamped in letters”. In January 1900 it was on the menu at New York City’s Au Lion d’Or.
Also unclear is whether the soup or the linguistic term for an overabundance of acronyms or abbreviations came first; food historian Janet Clarkson notes that “the first reference I have found so far to the metaphorical alphabet soup also occurs in 1883, in a quotation by the originator of Life magazine, John Ames Mitchell, referring to teaching his son the alphabet soup (the ABCs) of business.”
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