Your opinion? Maybe TOO hot? Wasn't expensive and a bottle will likely last
me for years.
--
"When you choose the lesser of two evils, always
remember that it is still an evil." - Max Lerner
Too sweet for me. Try their Sambal Oelek.
Kent
I like it cause there is a sweet garlic taste under the fire and the
crystal clear bottle that shows off it's brilliant hue with the green
cap is visually appealing. The stuff is evidently Vietnamese in origin
although it's made in the US. Some people call it "cock sauce" although
I wouldn't do that in mixed company.
The stuff used to be ridiculously cheap with the big bottle going for
less than $1.50. I bought my first bottle because it seemed like such a
good deal and was hooked from then on. I use mayo mixed with Sriracha
and a little sesame oil as a sauce for ahi.
Too hot straight out of the bottle, but if used in a cooked dish or
sauce its is better imo.
Now a days i prefer the Louisiana style "Red Rooster" hot sauce.
Fortunately i came to this conclusion before my paranoia with Chinese
food products set in.
--
JL
I wish this stuff came in much smaller bottles. I'll be on mine for
years.
http://www.amazon.com/Sriracha-Cookbook-Rooster-Sauce-Recipes/dp/1607740036/serieats-20
HOT!!!! Yes !! I love it..
That's hot sauce for you. People's reactions varies wildly. I guess you
should be more careful about what you take from here.
It is Vietnamese style hot sauce. I like it. It has more flavor than
ordinary chili sauce. I love it with eggs. I add it as an ingredient to
meatloaf and meatballs. Hot is relevant. On an American scale it is
probably too hot but on an Asian scale it is very tame. You get used to the
heat pretty quick. It has less heat than your average Tabasco sauce.
Paul
It's sour, sugary junk, and I've bought it exactly once.
> NO WAY! In an instant I was pouring snot, sweat and tears!!!
You're wussy. It's hardly hot.
>
> Good luck! I'd suggest starting miserly by putting a small puddle on the
> plate to dip from.
That's probably the crappy Bud Light talking.
>
> Andy
--Bryan
It's Vietnamese style and tastes good. It, of course, does not pass the
gastirc purity test you apply to everything. Which makes it that much
better.
Paul
The great thing about this mix is that you have control over the fire
from mild to just about right. The folks here will mix in little fish
eggs that pop when you bite into them but I don't care much for fish eggs.
It was made to be what it is. A good tasting chili sauce in the tradition
of the founder's country of origin. I also see it at almost every
Vietnamese restaurant I have ever eaten at. It is commonly served as a
dipping sauce for egg rolls wrapped in lettuce. If they love it, what more
do I need to know?
I am however impressed that you claim to speak for the majority of the Asian
people. I am sure they'd be flatered.
Paul
Yeah, the whole world give a rat's ass about Sriracha sauce. What next?
Heinz 57?
Paul
Cubed ahi in a sauce of Sriracha, mayo, sesame oil and fish eggs is a
popular topping for nori-wrapped nigiri here. I guess this means we have
refined tastes too. :-)
>
> The orange eggs would seem kind redundant with the orange sriracha
> mayo<shrug>
>
> -sw
The orange eggs are put into the mix because they pop when you bite into
them.
> Your opinion?
Another much ado about nothing item. Ho Hum at best.
--
Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.
> On 13 Feb 2011 17:22:18 GMT, KenK <inv...@invalid.com> wrote:
>
> > Your opinion?
>
> Another much ado about nothing item. Ho Hum at best.
Life would not be as good for my daughter and I without Sriracha sauce.
It fills a certain hot sauce niche. For my wife and sons, it just
clutters up the fridge.
--
Dan Abel
Petaluma, California USA
da...@sonic.net
> Life would not be as good for my daughter and I without Sriracha sauce.
> It fills a certain hot sauce niche. For my wife and sons, it just
> clutters up the fridge.
>
I agree there are many hot sauce niches. We have Marie Sharp's (thanks
to Will Borgeson RIP), Mexi-Pep and Indi-Pep, Crystal (for wings), and
Red Rooster (flavor without heat), as well as the Huy Fong Sriracha
and Sambal Oelek. Also chili oil and hot sesame oil.
> "Sqwertz" <swe...@cluemail.compost> wrote in message
> news:1jb03e3v...@sqwertz.com...
> > On Sun, 13 Feb 2011 21:36:53 -0800, Paul M. Cook wrote:
[snipped a bunch of attributions]
> >>>> It's Vietnamese style and tastes good.
> >>>
> >>> It's not Vietnamese-style. But I will grant you that it tastes good.
> >>>
> >>> What other Vietnamese hot sauces are you comparing it to? Just the
> >>> fact that is most prominent in Vietnamese restaurants here in the US
> >>> does not make it "Vietnamese style".
> >>> OTOH, Thai people say it's similar to their hot sauces/pastes, but
> >>> it's a product/style all it's own.
> >>>> It, of course, does not pass the
> >>>> gastirc purity test you apply to everything. Which makes it that much
> >>>> better.
> >>>
> >>> It's my most used and recommended hot sauce. I just used about 6"
> >>> (2ts) on my avocado with lime juice and salt about 10 minutes ago.
> >> It was made to be what it is. A good tasting chili sauce in the
> >> tradition
> >> of the founder's country of origin. I also see it at almost every
> >> Vietnamese restaurant I have ever eaten at. It is commonly served as a
> >> dipping sauce for egg rolls wrapped in lettuce. If they love it, what
> >> more
> >> do I need to know?
> >
> > Thank you for conceding gracefully, although reluctantly (It's NOT
> > from the founders country of origin)
> >
> >> I am however impressed that you claim to speak for the majority of the
> >> Asian
> >> people. I am sure they'd be flatered.
> >
> > As I explained, I get my information from real people directly
> > intimately involved with the subject at hand. That is how information
> > and knowledge is obtained, transferred, and preserved. It's been
> > happening for thousands of years and actually works quite well.
> >
> > I didn't just make it all up like you tried to do.
>
> Yeah, the whole world give a rat's ass about Sriracha sauce. What next?
> Heinz 57?
Steve is kind of anal about stuff like this. I like that, because I am
also. This is a food group, and we discuss these picky little points.
Just because all the Vietnamese restaurants in some area, like
California, have Sriracha on the table, doesn't mean it is a Vietnamese
sauce. Many Chinese restaurants in the US have chop suey, fortune
cookies and a whole lot of other US food. I understand you won't find
those in China. That's good to know. Even within the US, Chinese food
isn't consistent. I kept reading about "lo mein" on this group. What
the heck was that? I found out it was just a different name for chow
mein, used in parts of the US I've never been to.
Well, now I've got myself curious:
http://chinesefood.about.com/od/chinesedishfaqs/f/lomeinchowmein.htm
OK, chow mein noodles are fried, lo mein aren't. I didn't know that.
In my youth, chow mein noodles were very crispy, stale and came in cans.
Here in California, although chow mein noodles are fried, they are still
soft.
It sure does mean they like it and they are some seriously demanding diner
outers, let me tell ya. When I was working for a large oil company in Los
Angeles we'd often go to Little Vietnam for lunch with the Vietnamese
co-workers. They demanded food like mama made and were quite picky about
quality and presentation. And they put Sriracha on everything including
soup. They'd take a spoonful of soup and squirt sauce on it before eating
it. I know some of the dishes were stir fried and tossed in it. Same stuff
you buy in the store. Trust me, they ate the stuff by the quart, it was just
like what they'd want if they were in the Old Country.
Anyway, I said Vietnamese "style" not "absolutely 100% pure unadulterated
genuflect in front of the bottle Ho Chi Minh certified chili sauce. The
"real" stuff would probably blow your eyeballs out.
Paul
> OK, chow mein noodles are fried, lo mein aren't. I didn't know that.
> In my youth, chow mein noodles were very crispy, stale and came in cans.
> Here in California, although chow mein noodles are fried, they are still
> soft.
You'll go blind or die of old age arguing this one, Dan.
In Chinese, "mein" means noodles. On that, most everyone will agree.
From there it's a crap shoot bordering on an almost religious war.
When I was a kid, all chow mein was as you first describe. The stir
fried part was all veggies, mostly bean sprouts, and were heaped on a
bed of crispy fried noodles. Every Chinese resto I ate at from South
to North CA did this and as late as 1969, the last time I came home on
leave to Sacto.
Fast forward 10 yrs.
I couldn't find a single resto in SFBA that knew what the Hell I was
talking about. If it was chow mein or any other kind of mein, it was
those soft noodles, what are called pan-fried noodles, all mixed
together with a few veggies and stir fried together, a version I'd
never heard of. Even Frank Fat's, the last place I had crispy noodles,
claimed to never have heard of such a thing as crispy noodles. I've
argued this for years and have never found another person, beside
yourself, here and now, that will even acknowledge such a thing as
"crispy noodles" in chow mein. This despite those "canned" "stale"
noodles still being available for purchase in most supermkts.
The only Chinese resto I've found this crispy version still sold is a
place way down in Visalia. They ask before serving which version you
would prefer. Even then, the veggie stir-fry is on top of a bed of
soft noodles.
My theory is, resto owners discovered that bean sprouts were becoming
too pricey, so they jes started subbing the soft noodles right in the
stir-fry. Cheap and filling. Big profit margin. Like putting rice
in burritos. Resto chow meins now are mostly crap, a few wimpy
veggies floating around in a sea of greasy limp noodles. If I want
the other style, I hafta make it myself, which I gladly do, still
dearly loving stir-fried bean sprouts on top of crispy crunchy
noodles.
I argued this in ba.food, years ago, spawning one of the longest
running threads, ever. Not a single person agreed with me. Have fun
with this one, Dan. I'm outta here! ;)
nb
Huh, weird. There is a Chinese place near me, been there forever, called
Dragon Gate. They serve the old style "chow mein" which I have never
ordered but my fellow diners have. It's crispy fried noodles with a sauce
and a lot of vegetables and mung bean sprouts. Looks rather bland to me.
Paul
Old-time Chinese restaurants in America were owned and run by
Cantonese, and Cantonese cooking relies on ingredient freshness and
quality more than spices.
> In article <50rhl6de9sr4enar2...@4ax.com>,
> sf <s...@geemail.com> wrote:
>
> > On 13 Feb 2011 17:22:18 GMT, KenK <inv...@invalid.com> wrote:
> >
> > > Your opinion?
> >
> > Another much ado about nothing item. Ho Hum at best.
>
> Life would not be as good for my daughter and I without Sriracha sauce.
> It fills a certain hot sauce niche. For my wife and sons, it just
> clutters up the fridge.
I think I remember that your wife doesn't like heat. I do, but
sriracha isn't one of them... I don't think it's too hot, I think it's
too bland.
> On 2011-02-14, Dan Abel <da...@sonic.net> wrote:
>
> > OK, chow mein noodles are fried, lo mein aren't. I didn't know that.
> > In my youth, chow mein noodles were very crispy, stale and came in cans.
> > Here in California, although chow mein noodles are fried, they are still
> > soft.
>
> You'll go blind or die of old age arguing this one, Dan.
>
> In Chinese, "mein" means noodles. On that, most everyone will agree.
> From there it's a crap shoot bordering on an almost religious war.
> When I was a kid, all chow mein was as you first describe.
> I argued this in ba.food, years ago, spawning one of the longest
> running threads, ever. Not a single person agreed with me. Have fun
> with this one, Dan. I'm outta here! ;)
Thanks for the info! I figured it was because I grew up in Podunk,
Washington. Stale, crisp noodles with bland stuff on top. There were a
few "Chinese" restaurants, but most around there were
"Chinese/American". Part of your party could get bland Chinese food,
some tasting like it was off the steam table, and the rest could get
freshly cooked, tasty burgers or sandwiches, with fries. I moved to
Seattle for college, and the quality of the Chinese food improved
immensely.
--Bryan
I'm a bit of a nut about hot sauces - mostly they're variations of the
same thing. It's great to find something different and I suppose that's
the secret of Sriracha's success.
Fun brother! Mostly, I'll just pick anything interesting off the shelf
and have not bought any off a website.
I just got some Japanese yuzu hot sauce and it's fair. The only reason I
bought it was there was a splashy star on the label that said "hot!" As
it goes, it ain't. I like Pico Pica Real Mexican Hot Sauce a lot. It's
medium spicy but it's got a lot of garlic and cumin in it - tasty!
>
> Andy