Sponsored By

Ball Park Brand Removes Nitrates, By-Products and Added Fillers

The brand has removed added nitrites and nitrates from all Ball Park beef hot dogs, and eliminated by-products and added fillers from its meat line.

Rebekah Marcarelli, Senior Editor

January 1, 2018

1 Min Read
Supermarket News logo in a gray background | Supermarket News

Ball Park brand announced it has removed added nitrites and nitrates from all Ball Park beef hot dogs, and eliminated by-products and added fillers from its meat line.

"Ball Park brand has always been about quality," says Colleen Hall, director, Ball Park brand. "Today, we're taking the lead by removing artificial nitrites and nitrates and replacing them with natural alternatives, so people can feel even better when choosing Ball Park beef hot dogs. Consumers want more transparency when it comes to what's in the food they eat, and we want them to know we're listening."

Natural alternatives include celery juice powder and sea salt.

According to the National Hot Dog & Sausage Council, an estimated 20 billion hot dogs were consumed in the United States last year. During the core grilling season months, from Memorial Day to Labor Day, Americans typically consume seven billion hot dogs – which is 818 hot dogs consumed every second, company officials say. 

"The great taste of Ball Park brand hot dogs hasn't changed," says Hall. "We took special care to make sure everything consumers have come to love about our hot dogs stayed the same. We're America's number one beef hot dog for a reason, and taste tops the list."

The Ball Park beef core portfolio of hot dogs are made with 100 percent beef and contain no artificial colors, flavors, by-products or fillers.

About the Author

Rebekah Marcarelli

Senior Editor

Rebekah Marcarelli comes to the grocery world after spending several years immersed in digital media. A graduate of Purchase College, Rebekah held internships in the magazine, digital news and local television news fields. In her spare time, Rebekah spends way too much time at the grocery store deciding what to make for dinner.

Stay up-to-date on the latest food retail news and trends
Subscribe to free eNewsletters from Supermarket News

You May Also Like