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Clamato

Clamato
Clamato can.jpg
341 mL can of Mott's Clamato. The Canadian package artwork includes English and French languages.
Type Tomato juice/clam broth hybrid
Manufacturer Mott's (Dr Pepper Snapple Group)
Country of origin USA
Introduced 1969
Variants Beefamato, Nutrimato, X-tra Spicy, The Works
Related products Kraut juice, Caesar

Clamato /kləˈmt/ is a drink made of reconstituted tomato juice concentrate, flavored with spices and clam broth.

Made by Mott's, the name is a portmanteau of "clam" and "tomato". It is also referred to colloquially as "clamato juice". Clamato was produced in its current form beginning in 1966 by the Duffy-Mott company in Hamlin, New York, by two employees who wanted to create a Manhattan clam chowder style cocktail by combining tomato juice and clam broth with spices. Its history extends farther back, however, as a nearly identical drink was already present in a cookbook published 10 years earlier. They also named the new cocktail Mott's Clamato and secured the trademark for the new brand. The brand was owned by Cadbury-Schweppes after the company bought Mott's in 1982. It is now owned by the Dr Pepper Snapple Group after the business was spun off of Cadbury-Schweppes in 2008.

Clamato is used primarily as a mix for alcoholic beverages (an estimated 60% of sales in the US in 2008), and it is popular for this in both Canada and Mexico, but curiously much less so in the United States (outside of Canadian-American and Mexican-American communities). The Caesar is one of the top selling cocktails across Canada. A Canadian creation, the Caesar (or Bloody Caesar) was invented in 1969 to celebrate the opening of Marco's Italian restaurant at the Calgary Inn (now the Westin Calgary). Resident mixologist and food and beverage manager Walter Chell was commissioned to develop a new cocktail. He took inspiration from the flavours of Spaghetti Vongole (spaghetti with clams), and combined sweet (tomato juice), salty (clam nectar), sour (lime), spicy (Worcestershire sauce) and bitter (celery salt) into his new concoction. After naming it for the Roman emperor, legend has it that he served one to an Englishman who exclaimed: "That's a good bloody Caesar!"


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