DailyDirt: Sriracha In Everything
from the urls-we-dig-up dept
The hot sauce that has gotten insanely popular over the past few years is getting into everything. Several fast food chains — Pizza Hut, Dominoes, Taco Bell, Subway, Jack In The Box, Panda Express, Wendy’s — have added Sriracha to their menu in some way. There’s no trademark on Sriracha, so there’s no legal friction to using the name/product. Maybe some products aren’t using the real sauce, but it’s still free advertising for the authentic Sriracha. (And do you really want to risk alienating the rabid fans of Sriracha just to save a few bucks using a knock-off hot sauce?)
- Rogue Sriracha Hot Stout Beer has a little bit of rooster sauce in it. Spicy beer isn’t the only way to get drunk on Sriracha — there’s also Sriracha vodka (but that vodka doesn’t actually use real Sriracha sauce). [url]
- Sriracha-flavored popcorn made with authentic rooster sauce is available. “Every kernel is infused with the most amazing condiment on the planet.” [url]
- Sriracha has been in space — consumed by astronauts on the International Space Station. Sure, Tabasco is also available in space, but a liquid sphere of Tabasco is probably a bit messier than Sriracha in microgravity. [url]
If you’d like to read more awesome and interesting stuff, check out this unrelated (but not entirely random!) Techdirt post via StumbleUpon.
Filed Under: astronaut, beer, fad, flavor, food, popcorn, rooster sauce, spicy, sriracha, tabasco, trademark, vodka
Comments on “DailyDirt: Sriracha In Everything”
People can say anything they want, but the Siracha guy is walking away from millions by not trademarking it. People use that stuff like ketchup.
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“Sriracha sauce” existed before Huy Fong went into business and has been called that for a while. Can’t be trademarked since it entered the lexicon prior to anyone commercializing the sauce.
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No.
It didn’t enter “the lexicon” until he called his concoction ‘Siracha’.
Go ask your Grandma how she used siracha…
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If people are using his stuff like ketchup, then I think that Fong isn’t walking away from millions at all. He’s making them.
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The real stuff is great!!!! I put it on a lot of things. Give it a try on Pizza for example!!! YUMMMMMM!!!!
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It’s really good on Susi Rolls also!!! It really does work well on so many things. It’s not really HOT, but it has a really good flavor.
Am I the only one that feels that Sriracha is highly overrated? I’m not saying it’s bad, I just can’t agree that it’s as amazing as almost everyone seems to think.
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andrew ? is that you ? ? ?
hee hee hee
fyi, andrew zimmern of ‘bizarre foods’ teevee show (which i like and watch a lot), had a segment on a show i saw recently about the sauce and vietnamese immigrant who started the company, and that was something he repeated throughout the segment: didn’t see what all the fuss was about…
not sure if it was a new or old show, but that was pretty much his take: thought it was ‘ok’ sauce, but no big deal… kind of weird thing is, he made allowances for how much he admired the guy and his operation, and THAT was what made it a ‘great’ product for him…
frankly, while i certainly do admire the guy and what he has done, i have not had a chance to try the sauce yet (and not something i am generally into that much: a little hot sauce on a wing or shrimp, whatever, sure, but not an every meal thing for me; besides, i like some spicy thai and peanut sauces better); BUT, basing your ‘taste’ in that condiment on how it was made and the backstory, is kind of retarded: either you like the taste of the sauce and buy it because of that, or you don’t…
having said that, i am intending to buy a bottle because the guy seems like a quintessential American success story, BUT, if i don’t care for it, i won’t buy any more just because he is a ‘good guy’…
also, having seen the segment, i have some qualms with the fact that they are mono-culture farming of -i think it was- 2000 thousand acres devoted exclusively to peppers… i think we are fucking up big time with mono-cultures, and need to go back to interplanting on smaller scales, varied crop rotations, etc which provides the benefits of a diverse agricultural ecosystem, and sustains the land better than mono-cultural, force-fed fertilizers, endless dousing with herbicides/pesticides, BECAUSE YOU HAVE ELIMINATED all the beneficial microbes and bugs that could help us raise crops…
HOWEVER, that argument can be made for 90%+ of our agricultural products, because ‘that is they way it is done’ in a system dominated by Big Ag… not fair to pick on him for what is the prevailing practice…
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um, 2000 acres, not 2000 thousand…
guess i can’t resist going full-pedant even on myself…
im an idjit ! ! !
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Same here. Like ketchup, I am not into this kind of “package your taste in a sugary goo”.
So I find it at best somewhat more appealing than ketchup. And ketchup is the bane of any cook with a tad of conscience.
At the same time ketchup is undeniably popular.
Basically, it would seem that the roosters are going for the “Heinz tomato ketchup” angle: sell in a hugely inflated cut-throat market at a larger margin than your fly-by-night competitors by banking on brand recognition. And if you are around for decades in a cut-throat market, you get time to improve your product and get the processes under control in order to deliver reliable quality from a changing availability and constitution of ingredients. “I remember this one, and it was pretty ok”.
Like you, I don’t consider the sauce amazing. It beats ketchup, but that’s a low bar to cross. But still a bar made of solid gold.
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Heinz meets your low bar with ketchup flavored with sriracha.
http://news.heinz.com/press-release/general/heinz-tomato-ketchup-gets-new-twist-sriracha-flavor
The Oatmeal has been pushing this stuff for years
Popular Internet comic The Oatmeal uses Sriracha as a recurring theme in his comics and quizzes. He even has a whole section of his web store devoted to Sriracha-themed wares, like “Hot Cock” boxers and lip balm.
I just picked up a bottle of Trader Joe’s branded Sriracha. We’ll see how it compares…
What can you say?
Mo’ hotta, mo’ betta!
Si Racha
Actually the sauce originates from Thailand not that far from Bangkok at Si Racha. Not Vietnam. Not California. The sauce is just deseeded dried chillis, peeled garlic cloves, salt, sugar & water. No vinegar. Soak it all together for a while, boil and puree.