Candidates hungry for votes show up for Ohio food favourites
CINCINNATI — Candidates hungry for votes in one pivotal Ohio county often spice up their quest with Cincinnati-style chili. If they’re in the northwest part of the state, hot dogs made famous on the TV show “M.A.S.H.” are on the menu. If in Cleveland, they’re likely to find themselves poring over the eclectic choices at the West Side Market.
Republican Donald Trump’s running mate, Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, became the latest chili-partaking candidate last month with a platter heaped with spaghetti, chili and grated cheese at Price Hill Chili, on the Cincinnati west side in Hamilton County. Once reliably Republican, Hamilton has emerged as a swing county in a swing state after Democrat Barack Obama carried it twice, winning Ohio both times.
Obama, former Vice-President Dick Cheney and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich are among the notable politicians who have checked out the local chili, developed nearly a century ago by Greek immigrants who used secret recipes, blending ingredients such as cinnamon and cumin for innovative flavours.
“We have our own thing in Cincinnati,” said Maria Papakirk of Camp Washington Chili, where her Greek immigrant father, Johnny Johnson, has been ladling out chili since 1951. “We are the chili capital of the world.”


