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A market mystery: Why do capers come in such tiny jars?

26 points| thunderbong | 1 year ago |cnn.com | reply

40 comments

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[+] seanhunter|1 year ago|reply
It's not a mystery at all afaics. They do spoil over time if not used, and you don't need that many of them because of their intense flavour so it makes sense to only have a small jar open at any given time so they don't spoil.

As for getting them out of a jar I really don't know what to say. It's a small jar so use a small spoon? That's what I do, and I presumed everyone else also did.

Your life must be pretty good if getting capers out of a jar is something you have time to trouble yourself thinking of optimising.

Here's something which could be a genuine market mystery (which I know the reason for but it's kind of a fun one to ponder if you don't): Why is the label on angostura bitters always too big for the bottle?

[+] klausa|1 year ago|reply
Last time I bought capers, even my standard-issue Ikea teaspoons were too wide to fit in the jar.

Now, my fancy tiny espresso-stirring spoons that are small enough, but on the other hand; those are _too small_ to actually eat anything with them conveniently.

[+] echoangle|1 year ago|reply
The mystery is why the glass is long and thin, not why it is small, if I understood it correctly. You could have a glass with the same volume where you can use a normal spoon.
[+] hyperbolablabla|1 year ago|reply
Is it not common in America to have teaspoons in your drawer? You'd be hard pressed to find a household in the UK without them
[+] resolutebat|1 year ago|reply
The caper jars in question are too small for a normal teaspoon to fit into.

Me, I use a tiny little dessert fork. Also means you get only the capers and not the juice, which you don't want anyway.

[+] NegativeLatency|1 year ago|reply
>No standard spoon can fit inside the narrow openings of the typical glass caper jar.

Use a fork which strains away the brine too so you don’t get a wet situation happening

[+] ianvisits|1 year ago|reply
Teaspoons are narrower than forks -- if a fork fits in, then so would a normal teaspoon.
[+] ericpruitt|1 year ago|reply
This amuses me because I tend to use a fork even though I have spoons that can fit in my jars specifically to strain off the brine. I usually use capers to make salmon and cream cheese bagels, and I don't like drippy bagels.
[+] jamez|1 year ago|reply
The article reads a bit parochial, with scarce mentions of market dynamics. Capers are definitely an uncommon sight in the US.

In Italy you will occasionally spot this bad boy: https://www.amazon.it/Capperi-Sotto-Sale-secchiello-1Kg/dp/B...

Also: preserve your capers in vinegar and say goodbye to their flavor. All you get is tiny vinegar capsules.

[+] mcphage|1 year ago|reply
> All you get is tiny vinegar capsules.

Or to put it another way: you get tiny vinegar capsules!

[+] AndrewOMartin|1 year ago|reply
CNN Business demonstrating "Mah spoon is too big" levels of journalism.
[+] jandrewrogers|1 year ago|reply
I always buy them salt-packed in large jars. That said, most people use them so infrequently that a small jar lasts a long time.
[+] stevenwoo|1 year ago|reply
I've only bought capers at my local warehouse store and naturally it comes in a very big jar, about 4 inches in diameter.
[+] resolutebat|1 year ago|reply
I suspect that's for regular olive-sized capers with the stem attached? The article is about peppercorn-sized baby capers, where you could fit thousands into a jar that big.
[+] timeon|1 year ago|reply
> Reddit threads on the subject tend to upvote the theory [...]

This reminds me reporter in TV news asking random people on the street.

[+] the_biot|1 year ago|reply
Disheartening to see CNN has joined the list of publications that turn Reddit threads into what passes for "articles".
[+] choeger|1 year ago|reply
Capers are very common in my family's refrigerators, but still mostly used for a single dish (Königsberger Klopse). And the jars have been tiny for as long as I can remember. So it seems to be a universal design decision.
[+] nicexe|1 year ago|reply
In Greece and Cyprus, capers come in medium, big and gargantuan jars. Really, you can find jars with 3.9Kg of capers!

Greeks/Cypriots usually have them either as a side or in their salad.

[+] CoastalCoder|1 year ago|reply
I have just one recipe in my rotation that uses capers, and it requires exactly one such jar.

So I just drain the brine and dump the whole jar into the pot. Crises averted!

[+] saaaaaam|1 year ago|reply
What on earth is the recipe?! I love capers but a whole jar seems a lot.
[+] rgavuliak|1 year ago|reply
You can just use a fork to fish them out without losing the brine. I use a tiny fork, but I think normal size works too.
[+] joshu|1 year ago|reply
I bought an enormous jar in Napa not too long ago. And the capers are tiny, much smaller than the modern giant capers…
[+] Borrible|1 year ago|reply
Come on, there must be good caper tongs or caper spoons, after all, there's obviously a dire need for them, right?
[+] DonHopkins|1 year ago|reply
Because they taste icky and the narrow jar protects you from accidentally eating too many of them.