Chef and local celebrity Ann Kim opened her newest Twin Cities restaurant just two weeks ago, but the menu has already changed.
In name, at least.
At Kim's, a Korean-American restaurant in Uptown Minneapolis, she served her version of house-made Spam in two dishes: kimchi fried rice and a Spam 'n' cheese "sammie."
This, of course, was an ode to the salty, processed, canned pork from Austin, Minn.-based Hormel Foods, which introduced the product in 1937 before it gained popularity as a cheap and shelf-stable protein during World War II.
Trademark law, however, doesn't consider imitation the highest form of flattery.
"We did not get an official cease and desist letter. It was an inquiry email asking if we were using the official Spam product," Rachael Crew, a spokeswoman with Kim's Vestalia Hospitality group, said in a statement. "Based on Hormel's email, we knew it would come next. So we proactively changed the ingredient name to Ann's Ham."
The online and printed menus now reflect the change, including the renaming of the sandwich to "Ann's ham 'n' cheese." Kim did not respond to requests for comment.
Hormel declined to comment on this specific incident but did say in a statement that "as a Fortune 500 global branded food company" it has "brands that are beloved across the world."