Tag: sauce

Sriracha, the spicy sauce of which America goes crazy – Italian Cuisine

Sriracha, the spicy sauce of which America goes crazy


The fascinating story of sriracha, the spicy sauce of Thai origin that Americans are crazy about

The sriraha is a spicy red sauce made with chilies of Thai origin but spread all over the world, with variations and different uses depending on the countries and culinary traditions. This bottle of spicy seasoning and the sweet note given by sugar, almost like the most famous Ketchup sauce, has been around the world, entering both the homes of millions of consumers and the kitchens of restaurants. It is especially in the United States, however, that the sriraha has truly established itself commercially, enjoying a stunning success. Many varieties have appeared on the US market in recent years, but the merit of local and international fame of this spicy sauce undoubtedly goes to the Huy Fong Foods, producer of the famous red bottle with the rooster above.

The story of the multicultural sriracha of Huy Fong Foods

The company Huy Fong Foods, with its current headquarters in California, It is famous all over the world for its special recipe of sriraha, sold in plastic bottles with a green cap and with a rooster as a logo. This seasoning, also known as Cock or Rooster Sauce (Salsa del Gallo), born from an idea of ​​the founder David Tran, Vietnamese of Chinese origins transplanted in the United States, who reworked the original Thai recipe and gave life to a product that has literally driven the American people crazy. Consider that the reputation of this brand and the sales boom were such as to be the subject of a documentary of 2013, shot by the American director Griffin Hammond, focusing mainly on the origin, production and impact on mass culture. The film tells the story of the immigrant David Tran, forced to leave Vietnam and start from scratch in the United States. Here, after a brief career in Vietnamese restaurants, in 1980 the intuition of bottling and trying to sell his sriraha, based on peppers (which he initially picked by hand), salt, vinegar and sugar. The rest is legend; an exponentially growing company, a private supplier of hot peppers with a large field of 1750 acres, a large 650,000 square meter factory, about 20,000 bottles produced per hour and three types of sauces sold. Despite the fame David Tran remains a modest and simple man and a great worker, proud of his recipe and his origins; the rooster, for example, is a tribute to the rooster year, during which he created his Rooster Sauce.

The sriraha-mania in the United States

What is most surprising about Huy Fong Foods' spicy sauce, is how popular it has become only through word of mouth and without any kind of investment in advertising by the company. The bottle is present everywhere, from hot meals to fast food, from oriental restaurants to college cafeterias, even to the kitchens of famous chefs. The sriraha-mania, also because of the affordable price, the long duration of the sauce (a bottle, says David Tran, lasts an average of 6-8 months) and its incredible versatility in the kitchen, has become a real obsession. Used to season an infinity of beloved dishes in the States, including pasta, mac'n cheese, sandwiches, hot dogs, pizza and scrambled eggs, the rooster sauce has entered the homes of millions of consumers, sometimes unaware of its history and provenance, and has become a real social and media phenomenon. In fact, there are videos of famous YouTubers, songs, jingles, testimonials, the inevitable merchandise and recipe books based on sriraha. It must be said however that in addition to the Huy Fong Foods also other American brands they have established themselves in the American and international market, with the most disparate recipes, from the most natural ones, more or less fermented to those aged in whiskey barrels.

The origins of Thai spicy sauce

Whatever the ingredients, the processes of realization and the uses of the sauce adopted in the rest of the world, it is good to mention also the one that gave rise to this global phenomenon, that is the Thai sriraha, still produced. Born in the un-touristy place called Si Racha, the sauce was invented by a woman in the 1949. Unlike the many copies sold in other countries, this sriraha, which comes made with a local variety of chilies and is fermented in large silos, it is more liquid and a little sweeter and less spicy. In Thailand, where it is loved and known but not as much as that of Huy Fong Foods in America, it is mostly used to accompany fish and seafood dishes, typical of the area of ​​origin, but also soups, omelettes and fried chicken.

Tortiglioni recipe with sausage sauce – Italian Cuisine

Tortiglioni recipe with sausage sauce


  • 300 g short tortiglioni pasta
  • 200 g tomato concentrate
  • 200 g sausages
  • 70 g onion
  • grated cheese
  • cloves
  • laurel
  • dry white wine
  • olive oil
  • salt
  • pepper

For the recipe of tortiglioni with sausage sauce, bring a pot full of water on the fire that will boil and boil the pasta. Cut the sausages into rounds. Chop the onion and let it dry in 3 tablespoons of oil. Add the sausage washers and brown them very well, then add salt and pepper and sprinkle with half a glass of wine.

When the latter is partially evaporated, add the tomato paste, 2 ladles of hot water, 4 cloves and a bay leaf. Reduce the heat, cover and cook the sauce for about 25 '. Drain the pasta al dente and season immediately with the hot sauce.

Complete by sprinkling abundantly with grated cheese (pecorino or parmesan): the first will make the dish tastier.

Cod in persimmon sauce, and autumn becomes supportive – Italian Cuisine


It is not the first year that La Terrazza restaurant in Via Palestro, in Milan, joins the initiative Restaurants against hunger, thanks to which 2 euros for each 'solidarity dish' ordered go to support the projects against hunger for combat child malnutrition in the world.

The manager is always him, sous-chef Stefano Piccinini, who has had carte blanche in the recipe to propose: white paper that is filled with his creativity and so was born a dish designed specifically for restaurants against hunger, the Brandade of cod, persimmon sauce, caramelized onion and polenta chips.

The menu La Terrazza di Via Palestro – restaurant that shows the biggest covered terrace in the heart of Milan – is always there strongly seasonal and the 2018 launch of the solidarity campaign (which will last until December 31st) coincided with the season menu change. Between a "Bresaola di kobe" and a "Splintered scallops with pomegranate sauce and organic toasted seeds", in the first few days when the Brandade appeared in the list of appetizers, has already met the patrons of the patrons: a dish made to arouse curiosity, which customers choose for the particularity of the proposal and then are happy to know that what they pay to taste it will go to charity, at least in part.

After the linguine with coffee & sea urchin by Cristina Bowerman, here is the recipe of Stefano Piccinini, which combines other two strong elements and each other normally outsiders such as the delicious autumn persimmon and cod (for those who still have doubts about the difference with the stockfish, the answer is here).

Brandade of cod, persimmon sauce, caramelized onion and polenta chips

166914Ingredients:

800 g desalted cod

300 cl milk

2 persimmons

1 red Tropea onion

1 shallot

200 g polenta

30 ml apple vinegar

100 ml of water

60 g granulated sugar

Salt, pepper QB

Method

In a saucepan add a little oil and the previously chopped shallot, brown, add the cod cut into small pieces and deprived of the skin and milk. Bring everything to a boil and turn off the heat.

Meanwhile, take the persimmons, peel them and put the pulp in a sieve in order to obtain a smooth and homogeneous sauce. For the sweet and sour onion take a saucepan add the sugar, water and vinegar brought to a boil add the peeled and peeled onion, leave to soak for about 8 min.

At this point the cod will be cooked, drain it from the milk and blend adding a little 'cooking milk and a drizzle of oil until you get a homogeneous mixture very similar to a mashed. Salt and pepper.

For the chips, cook the polenta in the traditional way, once cooked roll it out between two sheets of baking paper, obtaining a thickness of about three millimeters, coppatela of the shape you prefer and let it dry out. Once the chips are dried, bring the oil to a very high temperature (around 200C °) and fry very quickly, drain and put them to dry on a sheet of absorbent paper.

Composition of the dish

Cover the bottom of the plate with the persimmon sauce overlaid on our brandade and garnish everything with the julienne-cut onion and the polenta chips.

Carra Traverso Saibante
October 2018

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