Как правильно пишется слово «табаско»
таба́ско
таба́ско, нескл., с. (соус)
Источник: Орфографический
академический ресурс «Академос» Института русского языка им. В.В. Виноградова РАН (словарная база
2020)
Делаем Карту слов лучше вместе
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Вопрос: привой — это что-то нейтральное, положительное или отрицательное?
Синонимы к слову «табаско»
Синонимы к слову «Табаско»
Предложения со словом «табаско»
- После этого в гаспачо добавляют готовый соус табаско, лимонный сок, натуральный уксус и оливковое масло по вкусу.
- Для соуса добавьте в майонез лимонный сок, чесночный и луковый порошок, сладкий соус чили, молотый перец чили и соус табаско.
- Для заправки тщательно смешайте сметану, соус табаско и бренди.
- (все предложения)
Значение слова «Табаско»
-
Таба́ско (исп. Tabasco, аст. Onōhuālco; испанское произношение: [taˈβasko]). Официальное название Свободный и Суверенный Штат Табаско (Estado Libre y Soberano de Tabasco) — штат в Мексике. Граничит с Веракрус на западе, Чьяпасом на юге, Кампече на северо-востоке, а также с департаментом Петен в Гватемале на востоке. Севернее штата находится залив Кампече. Территория штата является северной частью Теуантепека. (Википедия)
Все значения слова ТАБАСКО
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Таба́ско (исп. Tabasco, аст. Onōhuālco; испанское произношение: [taˈβasko]). Официальное название Свободный и Суверенный Штат Табаско (Estado Libre y Soberano de Tabasco) — штат в Мексике. Граничит с Веракрус на западе, Чьяпасом на юге, Кампече на северо-востоке, а также с департаментом Петен в Гватемале на востоке. Севернее штата находится залив Кампече. Территория штата является северной частью Теуантепека.
Все значения слова «Табаско»
-
После этого в гаспачо добавляют готовый соус табаско, лимонный сок, натуральный уксус и оливковое масло по вкусу.
-
Для соуса добавьте в майонез лимонный сок, чесночный и луковый порошок, сладкий соус чили, молотый перец чили и соус табаско.
-
Для заправки тщательно смешайте сметану, соус табаско и бренди.
- (все предложения)
- песто
- ткемали
- гуакамоле
- карри
- провансаль
- (ещё синонимы…)
- штат
- бальзамический уксус
- лимонный сок
- кайенский перец
- оливковое масло
- (ещё синонимы…)
- на реке табаско
- (полная таблица сочетаемости…)
Правильное написание слова табаско:
табаско
Крутая NFT игра. Играй и зарабатывай!
Количество букв в слове: 7
Слово состоит из букв:
Т, А, Б, А, С, К, О
Правильный транслит слова: tabasko
Написание с не правильной раскладкой клавиатуры: nf,fcrj
Тест на правописание
штат
Наиболее популярные синонимы: штат
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В слове «табаско» ударение падает на слог с последней буквой А — табАско.
Проверь себя!
Как правильно ставить ударение в слове ЗАГНУТЫЙ?
загнУтый или зАгнутый
Острый соус табаско известен во всем мире. Эта жгучая приправа придает особый вкус блюдам и входит в состав многих алкогольных коктейлей. Оригинальный соус выпускает американская компания McIlhenny, владелец торговой марки Tabasko. Производят его в Луизиане с 1868 года и продают более чем в 160 странах мира. Рассказываем об истории, видах и полезных свойствах популярной добавки. Можно ли приготовить табаско в домашних условиях и как правильно использовать.
Состав табаско
В классическом рецепте 3 ингредиента: жгучий перец, соль, уксус. В нем нет консервантов, загустителей и других химических добавок. Поэтому продукт может расслаиваться во время хранения, бутылочку нужно встряхивать перед каждым применением.
Для приготовления используют острый красный перец — в оригинальном варианте это табаско, кайенский и халапеньо, хотя вместо них можно взять любой чили. Понадобится также соль, лучше всего крупная морская. Третий ингредиент — белый дистиллированный уксус, но подойдет также винный, бальзамический, яблочный и рисовый.
Кстати
От вида перца зависит острота продукта. Tabasko Original получает по шкале Сковилла от 2500 до 5000 единиц. По этому показателю он уступает только аналогу с хабанеро, который набирает более 7000 единиц, и новому продукту Scorpion, чья жгучесть зашкаливает за 35 000 единиц.
Как делают табаско
Классический рецепт хранят втайне, но общий принцип приготовления известен. Соус делают из спелого перца ярко-красного цвета. Свежесобранные плоды измельчают в пюре, добавляют соль и оставляют в специальных бочках. Под воздействием бактерий происходит процесс лактоферментации: крахмал и сахар преобразуются в другие полезные вещества. Процесс занимает до трех лет. Затем перебродившую смесь извлекают из бочки, смешивают с уксусом и после фильтрации разливают по бутылочкам.
История табаско
История соуса началась приблизительно в 1840-х годах в американском штате Луизиана. Оригинальный рецепт придумал ирландец Эдмунд Макаленни. Он начал делать соус для родных и друзей и для удобства разливал его в бутылочки из-под одеколона. Успех кулинарного эксперимента был оглушительным. Тогда предприимчивый ирландец решил начать промышленное производство продукта и в 1868 году заказал на новоорлеанской стекольной фабрике тысячи миниатюрных бутылочек.
Кстати
Внешний вид бутылочек для Tabasko не меняется уже более 100 лет, а надпись на ромбовидной этикетке переведена на 22 языка. Дизайн упаковки считается самым узнаваемым в мире наряду с дизайном традиционных бутылок «Кока-Колы».
Где делают соус в наши дни
Это происходит в том же штате Луизиана, в небольшом поместье Эйвери Айленд. Производством занимается компания McIlhenny, которой управляют потомки Эдмунда Макаленни.
Соль для производства продукта добывают на соляных копях Луизианы. Здесь же долгое время выращивали кайенский перец — главный ингредиент приправы. Но с 1960 года сырье для соуса поставляют из Колумбии, Эквадора, Доминиканы, Венесуэлы и Коста-Рики. Перец выращивают и собирают под строгим контролем технологов McIlhenny. Сырье собирают вручную, а степень зрелости определяют с помощью индикатора, который есть у каждого сборщика.
Интересный факт
О популярности и качестве табаско говорит следующий факт. Компания McIlhenny — официальный поставщик соусов для NASA. Tabasko входит в рацион космонавтов из программы Space Shuttle и регулярно бывает в космосе.
Какие соусы производят под брендом Tabasko
Компания McIlhenny выпускает несколько видов продукции, которые отличаются по составу, цвету и остроте. Трехлетнюю выдержку в дубовых бочках проходит только один из них — Tabasko Original.
По степени жгучести соусы распределяются следующим образом:
-
Sweet’n’Spicy — самый мягкий с остро-сладким вкусом;
-
Green — зеленый на основе халапеньо, единственный без перцев табаско в составе;
-
Garlic — чесночный из смеси трех перцев с насыщенным вкусом;
-
Original — классический, умеренной остроты;
-
Habanero — острый;
-
Scorpion — самый острый.
Помимо оригинального продукта в мире производят десятки его версий с использованием разных видов перца. Они отличаются цветом и вкусом, могут быть острыми, сладкими и пряными.
Калорийность и полезные свойства
Калорийность классического табаско составляет 35,2 ккал на 100 г продукта. В нем много белков, жиров и углеводов, а также микроэлементов: железо, фосфор, калий, кальций, магний, медь и марганец.
Несмотря на отсутствие витаминов и минимальное количество минералов, соус обладает полезными свойствами:
-
улучшает кровообращение;
-
уменьшает концентрацию «плохого» холестерина, который вызывает появление атеросклеротических бляшек на стенках сосудов;
-
стимулирует работу пищеварительной системы;
-
регулирует уровень инсулина, поэтому подходит диабетикам.
Полезные свойства объясняются наличием в составе капсаицина. Это алкалоид натурального происхождения, который уменьшает свертываемость крови, ускоряет метаболизм и оказывает тонизирующее действие на организм.
С чем едят табаско
Популярность добавки во многом объясняется универсальностью. Соус добавляют практически в любое блюдо.
Вот несколько идей для его использования:
-
добавляйте в рагу, подливы, заправки для салатов и супов;
-
заправляйте блюда из мяса, птицы, рыбы, морепродуктов, риса и овощей;
-
используйте как приправу к пицце, бургерам, бутербродам, картофелю фри;
-
делайте с ним алкогольные коктейли.
Количество приправы в блюдах и напитках должно быть минимальным. Обычно советуют добавлять чайную ложку соуса на литр продукта. Любители острого могут увеличить это количество.
Для алкогольных коктейлей лучше использовать Tabasko Original. Именно он входит в состав «Кровавой Мэри» и других известных чейзеров.
Табаско: рецепт в домашних условиях
Приготовить 100% классический продукт в домашних условиях вряд ли получится. Для этого нужно найти оригинальное сырье и выдержать смесь из перца и соли в дубовой бочке в течение нескольких месяцев.
Существуют упрощенные способы приготовления, которые занимают гораздо меньше времени. Один из вариантов — измельчить перцы чили в блендере или мясорубке, смешать с солью, разлить в банки и стерилизовать, а затем оставить ферментироваться при комнатной температуре. Готовый продукт по вкусу и запаху будет очень похож на оригинал.
Что можно сделать?
Попробовать табаско в первый раз или познакомиться с новым вкусом популярного соуса. Использовать приправу классическим способом: для шашлыка, стейков, запеченных куриных крылышек, алкогольных коктейлей. Можно рискнуть и сделать его ингредиентом выпечки и десертов.
Узнайте о других соусах:
Что означает имя Табаско? Что обозначает имя Табаско? Что значит имя Табаско для человека? Какое значение имени Табаско, происхождение, судьба и характер носителя? Какой национальности имя Табаско? Как переводится имя Табаско? Как правильно пишется имя Табаско? Совместимость c именем Табаско — подходящий цвет, камни обереги, планета покровитель и знак зодиака. Полная характеристика имени Табаско и его подробный анализ вы можете прочитать онлайн в этой статье совершенно бесплатно.
Анализ имени Табаско
Имя Табаско состоит из 7 букв. Семь букв в имени – это люди канона. Они безоговорочно принимают внушенные в процессе воспитания правила и искренне верят в то, что их неукоснительное соблюдение – единственно возможный путь к счастью. Поэтому часто проявляют упрямство и нетерпимость даже в тех случаях, когда это никак логически не обосновано. Проанализировав значение каждой буквы в имени Табаско можно понять его тайный смысл и скрытое значение.
Значение имени Табаско в нумерологии
Нумерология имени Табаско может подсказать не только главные качества и характер человека. Но и определить его судьбу, показать успех в личной жизни, дать сведения о карьере, расшифровать судьбоносные знаки и даже предсказать будущее. Число имени Табаско в нумерологии — 8. Девиз имени Табаско и восьмерок по жизни: «Я лучше всех!»
- Планета-покровитель для имени Табаско — Сатурн.
- Знак зодиака для имени Табаско — Лев, Скорпион и Рыбы.
- Камни-талисманы для имени Табаско — кальцит, киноварь, коралл, диоптаза, слоновая кость, черный лигнит, марказит, мика, опал, селенит, серпентин, дымчатый кварц.
«Восьмерка» в качестве одного из чисел нумерологического ядра – это показатель доминанантного начала, практицизма, материализма и неистребимой уверенности в собственных силах.
«Восьмерка» в числах имени Табаско – Числе Выражения, Числе Души и Числе внешнего облика – это, прежде всего, способность уверенно обращаться с деньгами и обеспечивать себе стабильное материальное положение.
Лидеры по натуре, восьмерки невероятно трудолюбивы и выносливы. Природные организаторские способности, целеустремленность и незаурядный ум позволяют им достигать поставленных целей.
Человек Восьмерки напоминает сейф, так сложно его понять и расшифровать. Истинные мотивы и желания Восьмерки с именем Табаско всегда скрыты от других, трудно найти точки соприкосновения и установить легкие отношения. Восьмерка хорошо разбирается в людях, чувствует характер, распознает слабости и сильные стороны окружающих. Любит контролировать и доминировать в общении, сама не признает своих ошибок. Очень часто жертвует своими интересами во имя семьи. Восьмерка азартна, любит нестандартные решения. В любой профессии добивается высокого уровня мастерства. Это хороший стратег, который не боится ответственности, но Восьмерке трудно быть на втором плане. Табаско учится быстро, любит историю, искусство. Умеет хранить чужие секреты, по натуре прирожденный психолог. Порадовать Восьмерку можно лишь доверием и открытым общением.
- Влияние имени Табаско на профессию и карьеру. Оптимальные варианты профессиональной самореализации «восьмерки – собственный бизнес, руководящая должность или политика. Окончательный выбор часто зависит от исходных предпосылок. Например, от того, кто папа – сенатор или владелец ателье мод — зависит, что значит число 8 в выборе конкретного занятия в жизни. Подходящие профессии: финансист, управленец, политик.
- Влияние имени Табаско на личную жизнь. Число 8 в нумерологии отношений превращает совместную жизнь или брак в такое же коммерческое предприятие, как и любое другое. И речь в данном случае идет не о «браке по расчету» в общепринятом понимании этого выражения. Восьмерки обладают волевым характером, огромной энергией и авторитетом. Однажды разочаровавшись в человеке, они будут предъявлять огромные требования к следующим партнерам. Поэтому им важны те, кто просто придет им на помощь без лишних слов. Им подойдут единицы, двойки и восьмерки.
Планета покровитель имени Табаско
Число 8 для имени Табаско означает планету Сатурн. Люди этого типа одиноки, они часто сталкиваются с непониманием со стороны окружающих. Внешне обладатели имени Табаско холодны, но это лишь маска, чтобы скрыть свою природную тягу к теплу и благополучию. Люди Сатурна не любят ничего поверхностного и не принимают опрометчивых решений. Они склонны к стабильности, к устойчивому материальному положению. Но всего этого им хоть и удается достичь, но только своим потом и кровью, ничего не дается им легко. Они постоянны во всем: в связях, в привычках, в работе. К старости носители имени Табаско чаще всего материально обеспечены. Помимо всего прочего, упрямы, что способствует достижению каких-либо целей. Эти люди пунктуальны, расчетливы в хорошем смысле этого слова, осторожны, методичны, трудолюбивы. Как правило, люди Сатурна подчиняют себе, а не подчиняются сами. Они всегда верны и постоянны, на них можно положиться. Гармония достигается с людьми второго типа.
Знаки зодиака имени Табаско
Для имени Табаско подходят следующие знаки зодиака:
Цвет имени Табаско
Розовый цвет имени Табаско. Люди с именем, носящие розовый цвет, — сдержанные и хорошие слушатели, они никогда не спорят. Хотя всегда имеют своё мнение, которому строго следуют. От носителей имени Табаско невозможно услышать критики в адрес других. А вот себя они оценивают люди с именем Табаско всегда критично, из-за чего бывают частые душевные стяжания и депрессивные состояния. Они прекрасные семьянины, ведь их невозможно не любить. Положительные черты характера имени Табаско – человеколюбие и душевность. Отрицательные черты характера имени Табаско – депрессивность и критичность.
Как правильно пишется имя Табаско
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Original Tabasco red pepper sauce |
|
Type | privately held company |
---|---|
Industry | Food |
Founded | 1868; 155 years ago |
Founder | Edmund McIlhenny |
Key people |
Harold Osborn, CEO |
Products | Hot sauce and other condiments |
Brands | Tabasco |
Owner | McIlhenny family |
Number of employees |
About 200 (per company web site, August 2014) |
Heat | |
Scoville scale | 100–35,000 SHU |
Website | tabasco.com |
Tabasco is an American brand of hot sauce made from vinegar, tabasco peppers (Capsicum frutescens var. tabasco), and salt. It is produced by McIlhenny Company of Avery Island in south Louisiana, having been created over 150 years ago by Edmund McIlhenny.[1] Although tabasco peppers were initially grown only on Avery Island, they are now primarily cultivated in Central America, South America and Africa.[2] The Tabasco sauce brand also has multiple varieties including the original red sauce, habanero, chipotle, sriracha and Trinidad Moruga scorpion. Tabasco products are available in more than 195 countries and territories, and packaged in 36 languages and dialects.
History[edit]
A Tabasco advertisement from c. 1905. Note the cork-top bottle and diamond logo label, which is similar to those in use today.
According to the company’s official history, Tabasco was first produced in 1868 by Edmund McIlhenny,[3] a Maryland-born former banker who moved to Louisiana around 1840. However, as Jeffrey Rothfeder’s book McIlhenny’s Gold points out, some of the McIlhenny Company’s official history is disputed, and that the politician Maunsel White was producing a tabasco pepper sauce two decades before McIlhenny.[4] A 2007 book review by Mark Robichaux of The Wall Street Journal quotes Rothfeder’s book:
«The story actually begins in the pre-Civil War era with a New Orleans plantation owner named Maunsel White, who was famous for the food served at his sumptuous dinner parties. Mr. White’s table no doubt groaned with the region’s varied fare—drawing inspiration from European, Caribbean, and Cajun sources—but one of his favorite sauces was of his own devising, made from a pepper named for its origins in the Mexican state of Tabasco. White added it to various dishes and bottled it for his guests. Although the McIlhennys have tried to dismiss the possibility, it seems clear now that in 1849, a full two decades before Edmund McIlhenny professed to discover the Tabasco pepper, White was already growing Tabasco chilies on his plantation.»[4]
Rothfeder cited January 26, 1850, letter to the New Orleans Daily Delta newspaper crediting White as having introduced «Tobasco red pepper» (sic) to the southern United States and asserting that the McIlhenny was at least inspired by White’s recipe.[4] Jean Andrews, in her book «Peppers: The Domesticated Capsicums», goes further to declare—citing United States Circuit Court testimony from 1922—that prior to his death in 1862, «White gave some [pepper] pods, along with his recipe, to his friend Edmund McIlhenny, during a visit to White’s Deer Range Plantation.»[5] To distribute his, Edmund McIlhenny initially obtained unused cologne bottles from a New Orleans glass supplier. On his death in 1890, McIlhenny was succeeded by his eldest son, John Avery McIlhenny, who expanded and modernized the business, but resigned after only a few years in order to join Theodore Roosevelt’s 1st US Volunteer Cavalry Regiment, the Rough Riders.[6] On John’s departure, brother Edward Avery McIlhenny, a self-taught naturalist fresh from an Arctic adventure, assumed control of the company and also focused on expansion and modernization, running the business from 1898 until his death in 1949. Walter S. McIlhenny in turn succeeded his uncle Edward Avery McIlhenny, serving as president of McIlhenny Company from 1949 until his death in 1985. Edward McIlhenny Simmons then ran the company as president and CEO for several years, remaining as board chairman until his death in 2012.[7] Paul McIlhenny became company president in 1998 and was chairman until his death in 2013.[8] In 2012 McIlhenny cousin Tony Simmons assumed the company’s presidency and in June 2019 his cousin Harold Osborn was chosen as the next president and CEO.[9][10] McIlhenny was one of just a few U.S. companies to have received a royal warrant of appointment that certified the company as a supplier to Queen Elizabeth II. McIlhenny was one of the 850 companies around the world that have been officially designated as suppliers to the queen by such warrants. The warrant held was «Supplier of Tabasco HM The Queen — Master of the Household — Granted in 2009».[11] In 2005, Avery Island was hit hard by Hurricane Rita, and the family constructed a 17-foot (5.2 m)-high levee around the low side of the factory and invested in back-up generators.[12]
Production[edit]
Tabasco pepper mash aging in barrels on Avery Island, Louisiana.
Originally all peppers used in Tabasco sauce were grown on Avery Island. Over time growers were selected throughout Louisiana to accommodate demand and during the 1960’s the company established farms in various Latin American countries. As of 2013 peppers grown on the Island are used to produce seed stock, which is then shipped to foreign growers.[12] More predictable weather and readily available farmland in these locales allow a constant year-round supply. This ensures the availability of peppers should severe weather or other problems occur at a particular growing location. Following company tradition, peppers are picked by hand. To ensure ripeness, pickers compare peppers to a little red stick (le petit bâton rouge); peppers that match the color of the stick are then introduced into the sauce production process. Peppers are ground into a mash on the day of harvest and placed along with salt in white oak barrels previously used for whiskey of various distilleries.[13] To prepare the barrel, the inside of the barrel is de-charred (top layer of wood is removed), torched, and cleaned, to minimize the presence of any residual whiskey. The barrels are then used in warehouses on Avery Island for aging the mash. After aging for up to three years, the mash is strained to remove skins and seeds. The resulting liquid is then mixed with distilled vinegar, stirred occasionally for a month, and then bottled as a finished sauce.[14] Tabasco has released a Tabasco reserve edition with peppers aged for up to eight years, mixed with wine vinegar.[15] Tabasco Diamond Reserve Edition was a limited bottling released in 2018 to commemorate the brand’s 150th anniversary. This sauce consists of peppers that have been aged for up to fifteen years, then mixed with sparkling white wine vinegar.[16] For many years the salt used in Tabasco production came from the Avery Island salt dome, the largest such structure along the Louisiana coast.[17]
Varieties[edit]
A few of the varieties of Tabasco sauce, with the original on the far right.
Several sauces are produced under the Tabasco brand name.[18] A few of the varieties include:
- Buffalo Style Hot Sauce
- Cayenne garlic
- Chipotle-based smoked
- Family Reserve
- Habanero
- Jalapeño-based green
- Original Red sauce
- Raspberry Chipotle
- Roasted Pepper sauce
- Rocoto pepper sauce
- Scorpion sauce
- Sriracha
- Sweet & Spicy
The habanero, chipotle, and garlic sauces include the tabasco peppers blended with other peppers, whereas the jalapeño variety does not include tabasco peppers. None of these sauces, however, has the three-year aging process the flagship product uses. The brand also produces a selection of Tabasco Chocolate.
Spiciness[edit]
Tabasco Scorpion Sauce is the hottest sauce of the Tabasco brand, reaching up to 35,000 Scoville units.
Sauce | Scoville units[19] | Notes |
---|---|---|
Tabasco Pepper Sauce | 2,500–5,000 | Original flagship variety |
Habanero Sauce | 7,000+ | |
Chipotle Sauce | 1,500–2,500 | Chipotle-based sauce that also features pepper pulp created as part of the production of the original sauce |
Cayenne Garlic Sauce | 1,200–2,400 | blends milder peppers in with the tabasco peppers |
Green Jalapeño Sauce | 600–1,200 | Green pepper sauce |
Sweet & Spicy Sauce | 100–300 | Mildest of all the sauces |
Scorpion Sauce | 35,000 | The hottest of the sauces. The pepper itself can reach up to 2,000,000 Scoville units |
Packaging[edit]
Tabasco sauce highlighted in an MRE, middle right
Tabasco brand pepper sauce is sold in more than 195 countries and territories and is packaged in 36 languages and dialects.[3] The Tabasco bottle is still modeled after the cologne-style bottles used for the first batch of sauce in 1868.[12][3] As many as 720,000 two-ounce (57 ml) bottles of Tabasco[20] sauce are produced daily at the Tabasco factory on Avery Island. Bottles range from the common two-ounce and five-ounce (59 ml and 148 ml) bottles, up to a 1-US-gallon (3.8 l; 0.83 imp gal) jug for food service businesses, and down to a 1⁄8-US-fluid-ounce (3.7 ml) miniature bottle. There are also 0.11-US-fluid-ounce (3.3 ml) portion control (PC) packets of Tabasco sauce. One-eighth-ounce bottles of Tabasco, bearing the presidential seal, are served on Air Force One.[12] The US military has included Tabasco sauce in Meals, Ready-to-Eat (MREs) since the 1980s. The Australian, British and Canadian armies also issue small bottles of Tabasco sauce in their rations.[21]
Uses[edit]
McIlhenny Company produces Tabasco brand products that contain pepper seasoning, including popcorn, nuts, olives, mayonnaise, mustard, steak sauce, Worcestershire sauce, soy sauce, teriyaki sauce, marinating sauce, barbecue sauce, chili sauce, pepper jelly, and Bloody Mary mix. McIlhenny Company also permits other brands to use and advertise Tabasco sauce as an ingredient in their products (a common marketing practice called «co-branding»), including Spam, Hormel chili, Slim Jim beef sticks, Heinz ketchup, A1 steak sauce, Plochman’s mustard, Lawry’s salt, Zapp’s potato chips, Heluva Good dip, and Vlasic Pickles. Cheez-It crackers for a long time used McIlhenny’s Tabasco Green Pepper Sauce until 2018, when Kellogg’s replaced it with their own hot sauce. The original red Tabasco sauce has a shelf life of five years when stored in a cool and dry place; other Tabasco flavors have shorter shelf lives.[citation needed][22] Tabasco appeared on the menu of NASA’s Space Shuttle program and went into orbit on the Shuttles.[23] It was on Skylab and on the International Space Station and is popular with astronauts as a means of countering the blandness of food in space.
Cookbooks[edit]
During the Vietnam War, Brigadier General Walter S. McIlhenny issued The Charlie Ration Cookbook.[24] (Charlie ration or «C-Rats» was the name for the field meal then given to troops.) This cookbook came wrapped around a two-ounce bottle of Tabasco sauce in a camouflaged, water-resistant container. It instructed troops how to mix C-rations to make such meals as «Combat Canapés» or «Breast of Chicken under Bullets.»[23] Soldiers also requested their families to send them Tabasco sauce in «care packages» from home. During the 1980s, the U.S. military began to include miniature bottles of Tabasco sauce in its MREs. Eventually, miniature bottles of Tabasco sauce were included in two-thirds of all MRE menus.[25] During the same period, McIlhenny Company issued a new military-oriented cookbook using characters from the comic strip Beetle Bailey. Titled The Unofficial MRE Cookbook, it was offered free of charge to U.S. troops.
Toxicity[edit]
In a 1982 article titled «Pepper Sauce Toxicity» Tabasco pepper sauce’s toxicity was evaluated based on red peppers and vinegar. Sprague-Dawley rats (lab rats) were tested on. The oral median lethal dose in male lab rats was determined to be 23.58 mL/kg body weight (BW) with an upper limit of 29.75 mL/kg BW and a lower limit of 18.70 mL/kg BW. The median lethal dose in the female lab rats was found to be 19.52 mL/kg BW (15.64 mL/kg BW lower, 24.35 mL/kg BW upper). The sauce was found to be a mild skin irritant and a moderate to severe eye irritant. The toxicity to the eye is mainly caused by vinegar.[26]
In art and culture[edit]
In 1894 composer George W. Chadwick composed the Burlesque Opera of Tabasco,[27] a musical comedy that conductor Paul Mauffray revived in 2018 with support from McIlhenny Company. Tabasco has appeared in many movies and cartoons,[28] as well as on television. It featured in two James Bond films in the 1970s, The Man with the Golden Gun and The Spy Who Loved Me,[29] as well as a shot of the iconic bottle in Sidney Lumet’s 1974 film Murder on the Orient Express. Some appearances date as far back as the Our Gang short Birthday Blues in 1932 and Charlie Chaplin’s Modern Times in 1936. In Back to the Future Part III, the saloon bartender uses Tabasco as an ingredient for an instant hangover cure he calls «wake-up juice». Tabasco sauce was also an important element in the television series Roswell about alien/human hybrid teenagers who craved foods that were sweet and spicy and often carried bottles of Tabasco sauce with them. When the network tried to cancel the series in the first season, thousands of fans mailed bottles of Tabasco to the network to show their support.[30] The series continued for three seasons.
See also[edit]
- Condiment
- List of brand name condiments
- List of hot sauces
- Tabasco Road
- Water pepper
References[edit]
- ^ «Tabasco Sauce History and Lore». thespruceeats.com. Retrieved August 31, 2021.
- ^ «Tabasco Hot Sauce and the Fate of Louisiana’s Shorelines». sierraclub.org. March 14, 2018. Retrieved March 18, 2022.
- ^ a b c «The History of Tabasco Brand». Tabasco. Retrieved January 6, 2021.[non-primary source needed]
- ^ a b c Robichaux, Mark (October 10, 2007). «Ingredients of a Family Fortune». Wall Street Journal. Retrieved July 1, 2018.
- ^ Andrews, Jean (1995). Peppers: The Domesticated Capsicums (New ed.). Austin: University of Texas Press. ISBN 0-292-70467-4. OCLC 31295102.
- ^ «Some Like It Avery Hot». The Economist. March 24, 2011. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved December 31, 2021.
- ^ «Tabasco Company CEO–Chairman Ned Simmons dies at 83». WWLTV Eyewitness News Report. Archived from the original on December 28, 2013.
- ^ «Paul McIlhenny». CNN News. February 24, 2013. Retrieved February 24, 2013.
- ^ «Lead Changes for Tabasco, McIlhenny Company». KATC.com. Archived from the original on July 9, 2013. Retrieved March 6, 2013.
- ^ «Incoming Tabasco CEO Harold Osborn Embraces his Early Start». New Orleans City Business. July 15, 2019. Retrieved July 24, 2019.
- ^ «Search Members’ Directory | Royal Warrant Holders Association». www.royalwarrant.org.
- ^ a b c d Belson, Ken (February 3, 2013). «Tabasco’s Ties to Football Burn Deep». The New York Times. Retrieved July 24, 2019.
- ^ «About Our Barrels». Tabasco® Brand. Retrieved December 31, 2021.[non-primary source needed][non-primary source needed]
- ^ Shevory 2007, pp. B1–B4
- ^ «Product: Tabasco Reserve Pepper Sauce (Grab It While You Can)». thenibble.com. Archived from the original on May 1, 2018. Retrieved October 11, 2011.
- ^ Wyatt, Megan (April 23, 2018). «This gourmet Tabasco sauce will set tongues and wallets on fire». USA Today.
- ^ «Avery Island». 64 Parishes. Retrieved December 28, 2019.
- ^ «Hot Sauces | Food Products | Tabasco® Brand». Tabasco.[non-primary source needed]
- ^ «Scoville Chart». Retrieved February 17, 2021.[non-primary source needed]
- ^ Shevory 2007, p. B1
- ^ Graham-Harrison, Emma (February 18, 2014). «The eat of Battle – how the worlds armies get fed». The Guardian. Retrieved September 1, 2017.
- ^ «TABASCO® BRAND FOODSERVICE PRODUCT SPECIFICATIONS» (PDF). Tabasco.com. February 20, 2021. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ a b Edwards, Bob (November 29, 2002). «Tabasco Hot History». NPR. Retrieved June 7, 2008.
- ^ «Tabasco Cookbook». www.1stcavmedic.com.
- ^ «Tabasco and the war against bland military meals». National Museum of American History. April 29, 2015. Retrieved April 1, 2017.
- ^ Winek, C. L.; Markie, D. C.; Shanor, S. P. (1982). «Pepper Sauce Toxicity». Drug and Chemical Toxicology. 5 (2): 89–113. doi:10.3109/01480548209017772. PMID 7128479.
- ^ «Tabasco turns 150! Here are 10 fun facts about this historic hot sauce». today.com. Retrieved December 28, 2019.
- ^ Brittany (March 21, 2018). «What No One Tells You About TABASCO®». Iberia Travel. Retrieved December 28, 2019.
- ^ «Tabasco». Bond Lifestyle. February 22, 2014. Retrieved March 6, 2021.
- ^ «Roswell’s on the ropes, so…can hot sauce save this show?». New York Post. April 7, 2000. Retrieved October 7, 2020.
Works cited[edit]
- Shevory, Kristina (March 31, 2007). «The Fiery Family». The New York Times. Retrieved June 7, 2008.
Further reading[edit]
- Bernard, Shane K. (2007). Tabasco, an illustrated history : the story of the McIlhenny family of Avery Island, 1868-2007 (1st ed.). Avery Island, LA: McIlhenny Co. ISBN 978-0-9797808-0-6. OCLC 190786081.
- Kurlansky, Mark (2002). Salt: A World History. Walker & Company. ISBN 0-8027-1373-4..
- Rothfeder, Jeffrey (2009). McIlhenny’s Gold : How a Louisiana Family Built the Tabasco Empire. New York. ISBN 978-0-06-184424-9. OCLC 1021153074.
External links[edit]
- Official website
- How It’s Made: Tabasco Sauce
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Original Tabasco red pepper sauce |
|
Type | privately held company |
---|---|
Industry | Food |
Founded | 1868; 155 years ago |
Founder | Edmund McIlhenny |
Key people |
Harold Osborn, CEO |
Products | Hot sauce and other condiments |
Brands | Tabasco |
Owner | McIlhenny family |
Number of employees |
About 200 (per company web site, August 2014) |
Heat | |
Scoville scale | 100–35,000 SHU |
Website | tabasco.com |
Tabasco is an American brand of hot sauce made from vinegar, tabasco peppers (Capsicum frutescens var. tabasco), and salt. It is produced by McIlhenny Company of Avery Island in south Louisiana, having been created over 150 years ago by Edmund McIlhenny.[1] Although tabasco peppers were initially grown only on Avery Island, they are now primarily cultivated in Central America, South America and Africa.[2] The Tabasco sauce brand also has multiple varieties including the original red sauce, habanero, chipotle, sriracha and Trinidad Moruga scorpion. Tabasco products are available in more than 195 countries and territories, and packaged in 36 languages and dialects.
History[edit]
A Tabasco advertisement from c. 1905. Note the cork-top bottle and diamond logo label, which is similar to those in use today.
According to the company’s official history, Tabasco was first produced in 1868 by Edmund McIlhenny,[3] a Maryland-born former banker who moved to Louisiana around 1840. However, as Jeffrey Rothfeder’s book McIlhenny’s Gold points out, some of the McIlhenny Company’s official history is disputed, and that the politician Maunsel White was producing a tabasco pepper sauce two decades before McIlhenny.[4] A 2007 book review by Mark Robichaux of The Wall Street Journal quotes Rothfeder’s book:
«The story actually begins in the pre-Civil War era with a New Orleans plantation owner named Maunsel White, who was famous for the food served at his sumptuous dinner parties. Mr. White’s table no doubt groaned with the region’s varied fare—drawing inspiration from European, Caribbean, and Cajun sources—but one of his favorite sauces was of his own devising, made from a pepper named for its origins in the Mexican state of Tabasco. White added it to various dishes and bottled it for his guests. Although the McIlhennys have tried to dismiss the possibility, it seems clear now that in 1849, a full two decades before Edmund McIlhenny professed to discover the Tabasco pepper, White was already growing Tabasco chilies on his plantation.»[4]
Rothfeder cited January 26, 1850, letter to the New Orleans Daily Delta newspaper crediting White as having introduced «Tobasco red pepper» (sic) to the southern United States and asserting that the McIlhenny was at least inspired by White’s recipe.[4] Jean Andrews, in her book «Peppers: The Domesticated Capsicums», goes further to declare—citing United States Circuit Court testimony from 1922—that prior to his death in 1862, «White gave some [pepper] pods, along with his recipe, to his friend Edmund McIlhenny, during a visit to White’s Deer Range Plantation.»[5] To distribute his, Edmund McIlhenny initially obtained unused cologne bottles from a New Orleans glass supplier. On his death in 1890, McIlhenny was succeeded by his eldest son, John Avery McIlhenny, who expanded and modernized the business, but resigned after only a few years in order to join Theodore Roosevelt’s 1st US Volunteer Cavalry Regiment, the Rough Riders.[6] On John’s departure, brother Edward Avery McIlhenny, a self-taught naturalist fresh from an Arctic adventure, assumed control of the company and also focused on expansion and modernization, running the business from 1898 until his death in 1949. Walter S. McIlhenny in turn succeeded his uncle Edward Avery McIlhenny, serving as president of McIlhenny Company from 1949 until his death in 1985. Edward McIlhenny Simmons then ran the company as president and CEO for several years, remaining as board chairman until his death in 2012.[7] Paul McIlhenny became company president in 1998 and was chairman until his death in 2013.[8] In 2012 McIlhenny cousin Tony Simmons assumed the company’s presidency and in June 2019 his cousin Harold Osborn was chosen as the next president and CEO.[9][10] McIlhenny was one of just a few U.S. companies to have received a royal warrant of appointment that certified the company as a supplier to Queen Elizabeth II. McIlhenny was one of the 850 companies around the world that have been officially designated as suppliers to the queen by such warrants. The warrant held was «Supplier of Tabasco HM The Queen — Master of the Household — Granted in 2009».[11] In 2005, Avery Island was hit hard by Hurricane Rita, and the family constructed a 17-foot (5.2 m)-high levee around the low side of the factory and invested in back-up generators.[12]
Production[edit]
Tabasco pepper mash aging in barrels on Avery Island, Louisiana.
Originally all peppers used in Tabasco sauce were grown on Avery Island. Over time growers were selected throughout Louisiana to accommodate demand and during the 1960’s the company established farms in various Latin American countries. As of 2013 peppers grown on the Island are used to produce seed stock, which is then shipped to foreign growers.[12] More predictable weather and readily available farmland in these locales allow a constant year-round supply. This ensures the availability of peppers should severe weather or other problems occur at a particular growing location. Following company tradition, peppers are picked by hand. To ensure ripeness, pickers compare peppers to a little red stick (le petit bâton rouge); peppers that match the color of the stick are then introduced into the sauce production process. Peppers are ground into a mash on the day of harvest and placed along with salt in white oak barrels previously used for whiskey of various distilleries.[13] To prepare the barrel, the inside of the barrel is de-charred (top layer of wood is removed), torched, and cleaned, to minimize the presence of any residual whiskey. The barrels are then used in warehouses on Avery Island for aging the mash. After aging for up to three years, the mash is strained to remove skins and seeds. The resulting liquid is then mixed with distilled vinegar, stirred occasionally for a month, and then bottled as a finished sauce.[14] Tabasco has released a Tabasco reserve edition with peppers aged for up to eight years, mixed with wine vinegar.[15] Tabasco Diamond Reserve Edition was a limited bottling released in 2018 to commemorate the brand’s 150th anniversary. This sauce consists of peppers that have been aged for up to fifteen years, then mixed with sparkling white wine vinegar.[16] For many years the salt used in Tabasco production came from the Avery Island salt dome, the largest such structure along the Louisiana coast.[17]
Varieties[edit]
A few of the varieties of Tabasco sauce, with the original on the far right.
Several sauces are produced under the Tabasco brand name.[18] A few of the varieties include:
- Buffalo Style Hot Sauce
- Cayenne garlic
- Chipotle-based smoked
- Family Reserve
- Habanero
- Jalapeño-based green
- Original Red sauce
- Raspberry Chipotle
- Roasted Pepper sauce
- Rocoto pepper sauce
- Scorpion sauce
- Sriracha
- Sweet & Spicy
The habanero, chipotle, and garlic sauces include the tabasco peppers blended with other peppers, whereas the jalapeño variety does not include tabasco peppers. None of these sauces, however, has the three-year aging process the flagship product uses. The brand also produces a selection of Tabasco Chocolate.
Spiciness[edit]
Tabasco Scorpion Sauce is the hottest sauce of the Tabasco brand, reaching up to 35,000 Scoville units.
Sauce | Scoville units[19] | Notes |
---|---|---|
Tabasco Pepper Sauce | 2,500–5,000 | Original flagship variety |
Habanero Sauce | 7,000+ | |
Chipotle Sauce | 1,500–2,500 | Chipotle-based sauce that also features pepper pulp created as part of the production of the original sauce |
Cayenne Garlic Sauce | 1,200–2,400 | blends milder peppers in with the tabasco peppers |
Green Jalapeño Sauce | 600–1,200 | Green pepper sauce |
Sweet & Spicy Sauce | 100–300 | Mildest of all the sauces |
Scorpion Sauce | 35,000 | The hottest of the sauces. The pepper itself can reach up to 2,000,000 Scoville units |
Packaging[edit]
Tabasco sauce highlighted in an MRE, middle right
Tabasco brand pepper sauce is sold in more than 195 countries and territories and is packaged in 36 languages and dialects.[3] The Tabasco bottle is still modeled after the cologne-style bottles used for the first batch of sauce in 1868.[12][3] As many as 720,000 two-ounce (57 ml) bottles of Tabasco[20] sauce are produced daily at the Tabasco factory on Avery Island. Bottles range from the common two-ounce and five-ounce (59 ml and 148 ml) bottles, up to a 1-US-gallon (3.8 l; 0.83 imp gal) jug for food service businesses, and down to a 1⁄8-US-fluid-ounce (3.7 ml) miniature bottle. There are also 0.11-US-fluid-ounce (3.3 ml) portion control (PC) packets of Tabasco sauce. One-eighth-ounce bottles of Tabasco, bearing the presidential seal, are served on Air Force One.[12] The US military has included Tabasco sauce in Meals, Ready-to-Eat (MREs) since the 1980s. The Australian, British and Canadian armies also issue small bottles of Tabasco sauce in their rations.[21]
Uses[edit]
McIlhenny Company produces Tabasco brand products that contain pepper seasoning, including popcorn, nuts, olives, mayonnaise, mustard, steak sauce, Worcestershire sauce, soy sauce, teriyaki sauce, marinating sauce, barbecue sauce, chili sauce, pepper jelly, and Bloody Mary mix. McIlhenny Company also permits other brands to use and advertise Tabasco sauce as an ingredient in their products (a common marketing practice called «co-branding»), including Spam, Hormel chili, Slim Jim beef sticks, Heinz ketchup, A1 steak sauce, Plochman’s mustard, Lawry’s salt, Zapp’s potato chips, Heluva Good dip, and Vlasic Pickles. Cheez-It crackers for a long time used McIlhenny’s Tabasco Green Pepper Sauce until 2018, when Kellogg’s replaced it with their own hot sauce. The original red Tabasco sauce has a shelf life of five years when stored in a cool and dry place; other Tabasco flavors have shorter shelf lives.[citation needed][22] Tabasco appeared on the menu of NASA’s Space Shuttle program and went into orbit on the Shuttles.[23] It was on Skylab and on the International Space Station and is popular with astronauts as a means of countering the blandness of food in space.
Cookbooks[edit]
During the Vietnam War, Brigadier General Walter S. McIlhenny issued The Charlie Ration Cookbook.[24] (Charlie ration or «C-Rats» was the name for the field meal then given to troops.) This cookbook came wrapped around a two-ounce bottle of Tabasco sauce in a camouflaged, water-resistant container. It instructed troops how to mix C-rations to make such meals as «Combat Canapés» or «Breast of Chicken under Bullets.»[23] Soldiers also requested their families to send them Tabasco sauce in «care packages» from home. During the 1980s, the U.S. military began to include miniature bottles of Tabasco sauce in its MREs. Eventually, miniature bottles of Tabasco sauce were included in two-thirds of all MRE menus.[25] During the same period, McIlhenny Company issued a new military-oriented cookbook using characters from the comic strip Beetle Bailey. Titled The Unofficial MRE Cookbook, it was offered free of charge to U.S. troops.
Toxicity[edit]
In a 1982 article titled «Pepper Sauce Toxicity» Tabasco pepper sauce’s toxicity was evaluated based on red peppers and vinegar. Sprague-Dawley rats (lab rats) were tested on. The oral median lethal dose in male lab rats was determined to be 23.58 mL/kg body weight (BW) with an upper limit of 29.75 mL/kg BW and a lower limit of 18.70 mL/kg BW. The median lethal dose in the female lab rats was found to be 19.52 mL/kg BW (15.64 mL/kg BW lower, 24.35 mL/kg BW upper). The sauce was found to be a mild skin irritant and a moderate to severe eye irritant. The toxicity to the eye is mainly caused by vinegar.[26]
In art and culture[edit]
In 1894 composer George W. Chadwick composed the Burlesque Opera of Tabasco,[27] a musical comedy that conductor Paul Mauffray revived in 2018 with support from McIlhenny Company. Tabasco has appeared in many movies and cartoons,[28] as well as on television. It featured in two James Bond films in the 1970s, The Man with the Golden Gun and The Spy Who Loved Me,[29] as well as a shot of the iconic bottle in Sidney Lumet’s 1974 film Murder on the Orient Express. Some appearances date as far back as the Our Gang short Birthday Blues in 1932 and Charlie Chaplin’s Modern Times in 1936. In Back to the Future Part III, the saloon bartender uses Tabasco as an ingredient for an instant hangover cure he calls «wake-up juice». Tabasco sauce was also an important element in the television series Roswell about alien/human hybrid teenagers who craved foods that were sweet and spicy and often carried bottles of Tabasco sauce with them. When the network tried to cancel the series in the first season, thousands of fans mailed bottles of Tabasco to the network to show their support.[30] The series continued for three seasons.
See also[edit]
- Condiment
- List of brand name condiments
- List of hot sauces
- Tabasco Road
- Water pepper
References[edit]
- ^ «Tabasco Sauce History and Lore». thespruceeats.com. Retrieved August 31, 2021.
- ^ «Tabasco Hot Sauce and the Fate of Louisiana’s Shorelines». sierraclub.org. March 14, 2018. Retrieved March 18, 2022.
- ^ a b c «The History of Tabasco Brand». Tabasco. Retrieved January 6, 2021.[non-primary source needed]
- ^ a b c Robichaux, Mark (October 10, 2007). «Ingredients of a Family Fortune». Wall Street Journal. Retrieved July 1, 2018.
- ^ Andrews, Jean (1995). Peppers: The Domesticated Capsicums (New ed.). Austin: University of Texas Press. ISBN 0-292-70467-4. OCLC 31295102.
- ^ «Some Like It Avery Hot». The Economist. March 24, 2011. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved December 31, 2021.
- ^ «Tabasco Company CEO–Chairman Ned Simmons dies at 83». WWLTV Eyewitness News Report. Archived from the original on December 28, 2013.
- ^ «Paul McIlhenny». CNN News. February 24, 2013. Retrieved February 24, 2013.
- ^ «Lead Changes for Tabasco, McIlhenny Company». KATC.com. Archived from the original on July 9, 2013. Retrieved March 6, 2013.
- ^ «Incoming Tabasco CEO Harold Osborn Embraces his Early Start». New Orleans City Business. July 15, 2019. Retrieved July 24, 2019.
- ^ «Search Members’ Directory | Royal Warrant Holders Association». www.royalwarrant.org.
- ^ a b c d Belson, Ken (February 3, 2013). «Tabasco’s Ties to Football Burn Deep». The New York Times. Retrieved July 24, 2019.
- ^ «About Our Barrels». Tabasco® Brand. Retrieved December 31, 2021.[non-primary source needed][non-primary source needed]
- ^ Shevory 2007, pp. B1–B4
- ^ «Product: Tabasco Reserve Pepper Sauce (Grab It While You Can)». thenibble.com. Archived from the original on May 1, 2018. Retrieved October 11, 2011.
- ^ Wyatt, Megan (April 23, 2018). «This gourmet Tabasco sauce will set tongues and wallets on fire». USA Today.
- ^ «Avery Island». 64 Parishes. Retrieved December 28, 2019.
- ^ «Hot Sauces | Food Products | Tabasco® Brand». Tabasco.[non-primary source needed]
- ^ «Scoville Chart». Retrieved February 17, 2021.[non-primary source needed]
- ^ Shevory 2007, p. B1
- ^ Graham-Harrison, Emma (February 18, 2014). «The eat of Battle – how the worlds armies get fed». The Guardian. Retrieved September 1, 2017.
- ^ «TABASCO® BRAND FOODSERVICE PRODUCT SPECIFICATIONS» (PDF). Tabasco.com. February 20, 2021. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ a b Edwards, Bob (November 29, 2002). «Tabasco Hot History». NPR. Retrieved June 7, 2008.
- ^ «Tabasco Cookbook». www.1stcavmedic.com.
- ^ «Tabasco and the war against bland military meals». National Museum of American History. April 29, 2015. Retrieved April 1, 2017.
- ^ Winek, C. L.; Markie, D. C.; Shanor, S. P. (1982). «Pepper Sauce Toxicity». Drug and Chemical Toxicology. 5 (2): 89–113. doi:10.3109/01480548209017772. PMID 7128479.
- ^ «Tabasco turns 150! Here are 10 fun facts about this historic hot sauce». today.com. Retrieved December 28, 2019.
- ^ Brittany (March 21, 2018). «What No One Tells You About TABASCO®». Iberia Travel. Retrieved December 28, 2019.
- ^ «Tabasco». Bond Lifestyle. February 22, 2014. Retrieved March 6, 2021.
- ^ «Roswell’s on the ropes, so…can hot sauce save this show?». New York Post. April 7, 2000. Retrieved October 7, 2020.
Works cited[edit]
- Shevory, Kristina (March 31, 2007). «The Fiery Family». The New York Times. Retrieved June 7, 2008.
Further reading[edit]
- Bernard, Shane K. (2007). Tabasco, an illustrated history : the story of the McIlhenny family of Avery Island, 1868-2007 (1st ed.). Avery Island, LA: McIlhenny Co. ISBN 978-0-9797808-0-6. OCLC 190786081.
- Kurlansky, Mark (2002). Salt: A World History. Walker & Company. ISBN 0-8027-1373-4..
- Rothfeder, Jeffrey (2009). McIlhenny’s Gold : How a Louisiana Family Built the Tabasco Empire. New York. ISBN 978-0-06-184424-9. OCLC 1021153074.
External links[edit]
- Official website
- How It’s Made: Tabasco Sauce
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Original Tabasco red pepper sauce |
|
Type | privately held company |
---|---|
Industry | Food |
Founded | 1868; 155 years ago |
Founder | Edmund McIlhenny |
Key people |
Harold Osborn, CEO |
Products | Hot sauce and other condiments |
Brands | Tabasco |
Owner | McIlhenny family |
Number of employees |
About 200 (per company web site, August 2014) |
Heat | |
Scoville scale | 100–35,000 SHU |
Website | tabasco.com |
Tabasco is an American brand of hot sauce made from vinegar, tabasco peppers (Capsicum frutescens var. tabasco), and salt. It is produced by McIlhenny Company of Avery Island in south Louisiana, having been created over 150 years ago by Edmund McIlhenny.[1] Although tabasco peppers were initially grown only on Avery Island, they are now primarily cultivated in Central America, South America and Africa.[2] The Tabasco sauce brand also has multiple varieties including the original red sauce, habanero, chipotle, sriracha and Trinidad Moruga scorpion. Tabasco products are available in more than 195 countries and territories, and packaged in 36 languages and dialects.
History[edit]
A Tabasco advertisement from c. 1905. Note the cork-top bottle and diamond logo label, which is similar to those in use today.
According to the company’s official history, Tabasco was first produced in 1868 by Edmund McIlhenny,[3] a Maryland-born former banker who moved to Louisiana around 1840. However, as Jeffrey Rothfeder’s book McIlhenny’s Gold points out, some of the McIlhenny Company’s official history is disputed, and that the politician Maunsel White was producing a tabasco pepper sauce two decades before McIlhenny.[4] A 2007 book review by Mark Robichaux of The Wall Street Journal quotes Rothfeder’s book:
«The story actually begins in the pre-Civil War era with a New Orleans plantation owner named Maunsel White, who was famous for the food served at his sumptuous dinner parties. Mr. White’s table no doubt groaned with the region’s varied fare—drawing inspiration from European, Caribbean, and Cajun sources—but one of his favorite sauces was of his own devising, made from a pepper named for its origins in the Mexican state of Tabasco. White added it to various dishes and bottled it for his guests. Although the McIlhennys have tried to dismiss the possibility, it seems clear now that in 1849, a full two decades before Edmund McIlhenny professed to discover the Tabasco pepper, White was already growing Tabasco chilies on his plantation.»[4]
Rothfeder cited January 26, 1850, letter to the New Orleans Daily Delta newspaper crediting White as having introduced «Tobasco red pepper» (sic) to the southern United States and asserting that the McIlhenny was at least inspired by White’s recipe.[4] Jean Andrews, in her book «Peppers: The Domesticated Capsicums», goes further to declare—citing United States Circuit Court testimony from 1922—that prior to his death in 1862, «White gave some [pepper] pods, along with his recipe, to his friend Edmund McIlhenny, during a visit to White’s Deer Range Plantation.»[5] To distribute his, Edmund McIlhenny initially obtained unused cologne bottles from a New Orleans glass supplier. On his death in 1890, McIlhenny was succeeded by his eldest son, John Avery McIlhenny, who expanded and modernized the business, but resigned after only a few years in order to join Theodore Roosevelt’s 1st US Volunteer Cavalry Regiment, the Rough Riders.[6] On John’s departure, brother Edward Avery McIlhenny, a self-taught naturalist fresh from an Arctic adventure, assumed control of the company and also focused on expansion and modernization, running the business from 1898 until his death in 1949. Walter S. McIlhenny in turn succeeded his uncle Edward Avery McIlhenny, serving as president of McIlhenny Company from 1949 until his death in 1985. Edward McIlhenny Simmons then ran the company as president and CEO for several years, remaining as board chairman until his death in 2012.[7] Paul McIlhenny became company president in 1998 and was chairman until his death in 2013.[8] In 2012 McIlhenny cousin Tony Simmons assumed the company’s presidency and in June 2019 his cousin Harold Osborn was chosen as the next president and CEO.[9][10] McIlhenny was one of just a few U.S. companies to have received a royal warrant of appointment that certified the company as a supplier to Queen Elizabeth II. McIlhenny was one of the 850 companies around the world that have been officially designated as suppliers to the queen by such warrants. The warrant held was «Supplier of Tabasco HM The Queen — Master of the Household — Granted in 2009».[11] In 2005, Avery Island was hit hard by Hurricane Rita, and the family constructed a 17-foot (5.2 m)-high levee around the low side of the factory and invested in back-up generators.[12]
Production[edit]
Tabasco pepper mash aging in barrels on Avery Island, Louisiana.
Originally all peppers used in Tabasco sauce were grown on Avery Island. Over time growers were selected throughout Louisiana to accommodate demand and during the 1960’s the company established farms in various Latin American countries. As of 2013 peppers grown on the Island are used to produce seed stock, which is then shipped to foreign growers.[12] More predictable weather and readily available farmland in these locales allow a constant year-round supply. This ensures the availability of peppers should severe weather or other problems occur at a particular growing location. Following company tradition, peppers are picked by hand. To ensure ripeness, pickers compare peppers to a little red stick (le petit bâton rouge); peppers that match the color of the stick are then introduced into the sauce production process. Peppers are ground into a mash on the day of harvest and placed along with salt in white oak barrels previously used for whiskey of various distilleries.[13] To prepare the barrel, the inside of the barrel is de-charred (top layer of wood is removed), torched, and cleaned, to minimize the presence of any residual whiskey. The barrels are then used in warehouses on Avery Island for aging the mash. After aging for up to three years, the mash is strained to remove skins and seeds. The resulting liquid is then mixed with distilled vinegar, stirred occasionally for a month, and then bottled as a finished sauce.[14] Tabasco has released a Tabasco reserve edition with peppers aged for up to eight years, mixed with wine vinegar.[15] Tabasco Diamond Reserve Edition was a limited bottling released in 2018 to commemorate the brand’s 150th anniversary. This sauce consists of peppers that have been aged for up to fifteen years, then mixed with sparkling white wine vinegar.[16] For many years the salt used in Tabasco production came from the Avery Island salt dome, the largest such structure along the Louisiana coast.[17]
Varieties[edit]
A few of the varieties of Tabasco sauce, with the original on the far right.
Several sauces are produced under the Tabasco brand name.[18] A few of the varieties include:
- Buffalo Style Hot Sauce
- Cayenne garlic
- Chipotle-based smoked
- Family Reserve
- Habanero
- Jalapeño-based green
- Original Red sauce
- Raspberry Chipotle
- Roasted Pepper sauce
- Rocoto pepper sauce
- Scorpion sauce
- Sriracha
- Sweet & Spicy
The habanero, chipotle, and garlic sauces include the tabasco peppers blended with other peppers, whereas the jalapeño variety does not include tabasco peppers. None of these sauces, however, has the three-year aging process the flagship product uses. The brand also produces a selection of Tabasco Chocolate.
Spiciness[edit]
Tabasco Scorpion Sauce is the hottest sauce of the Tabasco brand, reaching up to 35,000 Scoville units.
Sauce | Scoville units[19] | Notes |
---|---|---|
Tabasco Pepper Sauce | 2,500–5,000 | Original flagship variety |
Habanero Sauce | 7,000+ | |
Chipotle Sauce | 1,500–2,500 | Chipotle-based sauce that also features pepper pulp created as part of the production of the original sauce |
Cayenne Garlic Sauce | 1,200–2,400 | blends milder peppers in with the tabasco peppers |
Green Jalapeño Sauce | 600–1,200 | Green pepper sauce |
Sweet & Spicy Sauce | 100–300 | Mildest of all the sauces |
Scorpion Sauce | 35,000 | The hottest of the sauces. The pepper itself can reach up to 2,000,000 Scoville units |
Packaging[edit]
Tabasco sauce highlighted in an MRE, middle right
Tabasco brand pepper sauce is sold in more than 195 countries and territories and is packaged in 36 languages and dialects.[3] The Tabasco bottle is still modeled after the cologne-style bottles used for the first batch of sauce in 1868.[12][3] As many as 720,000 two-ounce (57 ml) bottles of Tabasco[20] sauce are produced daily at the Tabasco factory on Avery Island. Bottles range from the common two-ounce and five-ounce (59 ml and 148 ml) bottles, up to a 1-US-gallon (3.8 l; 0.83 imp gal) jug for food service businesses, and down to a 1⁄8-US-fluid-ounce (3.7 ml) miniature bottle. There are also 0.11-US-fluid-ounce (3.3 ml) portion control (PC) packets of Tabasco sauce. One-eighth-ounce bottles of Tabasco, bearing the presidential seal, are served on Air Force One.[12] The US military has included Tabasco sauce in Meals, Ready-to-Eat (MREs) since the 1980s. The Australian, British and Canadian armies also issue small bottles of Tabasco sauce in their rations.[21]
Uses[edit]
McIlhenny Company produces Tabasco brand products that contain pepper seasoning, including popcorn, nuts, olives, mayonnaise, mustard, steak sauce, Worcestershire sauce, soy sauce, teriyaki sauce, marinating sauce, barbecue sauce, chili sauce, pepper jelly, and Bloody Mary mix. McIlhenny Company also permits other brands to use and advertise Tabasco sauce as an ingredient in their products (a common marketing practice called «co-branding»), including Spam, Hormel chili, Slim Jim beef sticks, Heinz ketchup, A1 steak sauce, Plochman’s mustard, Lawry’s salt, Zapp’s potato chips, Heluva Good dip, and Vlasic Pickles. Cheez-It crackers for a long time used McIlhenny’s Tabasco Green Pepper Sauce until 2018, when Kellogg’s replaced it with their own hot sauce. The original red Tabasco sauce has a shelf life of five years when stored in a cool and dry place; other Tabasco flavors have shorter shelf lives.[citation needed][22] Tabasco appeared on the menu of NASA’s Space Shuttle program and went into orbit on the Shuttles.[23] It was on Skylab and on the International Space Station and is popular with astronauts as a means of countering the blandness of food in space.
Cookbooks[edit]
During the Vietnam War, Brigadier General Walter S. McIlhenny issued The Charlie Ration Cookbook.[24] (Charlie ration or «C-Rats» was the name for the field meal then given to troops.) This cookbook came wrapped around a two-ounce bottle of Tabasco sauce in a camouflaged, water-resistant container. It instructed troops how to mix C-rations to make such meals as «Combat Canapés» or «Breast of Chicken under Bullets.»[23] Soldiers also requested their families to send them Tabasco sauce in «care packages» from home. During the 1980s, the U.S. military began to include miniature bottles of Tabasco sauce in its MREs. Eventually, miniature bottles of Tabasco sauce were included in two-thirds of all MRE menus.[25] During the same period, McIlhenny Company issued a new military-oriented cookbook using characters from the comic strip Beetle Bailey. Titled The Unofficial MRE Cookbook, it was offered free of charge to U.S. troops.
Toxicity[edit]
In a 1982 article titled «Pepper Sauce Toxicity» Tabasco pepper sauce’s toxicity was evaluated based on red peppers and vinegar. Sprague-Dawley rats (lab rats) were tested on. The oral median lethal dose in male lab rats was determined to be 23.58 mL/kg body weight (BW) with an upper limit of 29.75 mL/kg BW and a lower limit of 18.70 mL/kg BW. The median lethal dose in the female lab rats was found to be 19.52 mL/kg BW (15.64 mL/kg BW lower, 24.35 mL/kg BW upper). The sauce was found to be a mild skin irritant and a moderate to severe eye irritant. The toxicity to the eye is mainly caused by vinegar.[26]
In art and culture[edit]
In 1894 composer George W. Chadwick composed the Burlesque Opera of Tabasco,[27] a musical comedy that conductor Paul Mauffray revived in 2018 with support from McIlhenny Company. Tabasco has appeared in many movies and cartoons,[28] as well as on television. It featured in two James Bond films in the 1970s, The Man with the Golden Gun and The Spy Who Loved Me,[29] as well as a shot of the iconic bottle in Sidney Lumet’s 1974 film Murder on the Orient Express. Some appearances date as far back as the Our Gang short Birthday Blues in 1932 and Charlie Chaplin’s Modern Times in 1936. In Back to the Future Part III, the saloon bartender uses Tabasco as an ingredient for an instant hangover cure he calls «wake-up juice». Tabasco sauce was also an important element in the television series Roswell about alien/human hybrid teenagers who craved foods that were sweet and spicy and often carried bottles of Tabasco sauce with them. When the network tried to cancel the series in the first season, thousands of fans mailed bottles of Tabasco to the network to show their support.[30] The series continued for three seasons.
See also[edit]
- Condiment
- List of brand name condiments
- List of hot sauces
- Tabasco Road
- Water pepper
References[edit]
- ^ «Tabasco Sauce History and Lore». thespruceeats.com. Retrieved August 31, 2021.
- ^ «Tabasco Hot Sauce and the Fate of Louisiana’s Shorelines». sierraclub.org. March 14, 2018. Retrieved March 18, 2022.
- ^ a b c «The History of Tabasco Brand». Tabasco. Retrieved January 6, 2021.[non-primary source needed]
- ^ a b c Robichaux, Mark (October 10, 2007). «Ingredients of a Family Fortune». Wall Street Journal. Retrieved July 1, 2018.
- ^ Andrews, Jean (1995). Peppers: The Domesticated Capsicums (New ed.). Austin: University of Texas Press. ISBN 0-292-70467-4. OCLC 31295102.
- ^ «Some Like It Avery Hot». The Economist. March 24, 2011. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved December 31, 2021.
- ^ «Tabasco Company CEO–Chairman Ned Simmons dies at 83». WWLTV Eyewitness News Report. Archived from the original on December 28, 2013.
- ^ «Paul McIlhenny». CNN News. February 24, 2013. Retrieved February 24, 2013.
- ^ «Lead Changes for Tabasco, McIlhenny Company». KATC.com. Archived from the original on July 9, 2013. Retrieved March 6, 2013.
- ^ «Incoming Tabasco CEO Harold Osborn Embraces his Early Start». New Orleans City Business. July 15, 2019. Retrieved July 24, 2019.
- ^ «Search Members’ Directory | Royal Warrant Holders Association». www.royalwarrant.org.
- ^ a b c d Belson, Ken (February 3, 2013). «Tabasco’s Ties to Football Burn Deep». The New York Times. Retrieved July 24, 2019.
- ^ «About Our Barrels». Tabasco® Brand. Retrieved December 31, 2021.[non-primary source needed][non-primary source needed]
- ^ Shevory 2007, pp. B1–B4
- ^ «Product: Tabasco Reserve Pepper Sauce (Grab It While You Can)». thenibble.com. Archived from the original on May 1, 2018. Retrieved October 11, 2011.
- ^ Wyatt, Megan (April 23, 2018). «This gourmet Tabasco sauce will set tongues and wallets on fire». USA Today.
- ^ «Avery Island». 64 Parishes. Retrieved December 28, 2019.
- ^ «Hot Sauces | Food Products | Tabasco® Brand». Tabasco.[non-primary source needed]
- ^ «Scoville Chart». Retrieved February 17, 2021.[non-primary source needed]
- ^ Shevory 2007, p. B1
- ^ Graham-Harrison, Emma (February 18, 2014). «The eat of Battle – how the worlds armies get fed». The Guardian. Retrieved September 1, 2017.
- ^ «TABASCO® BRAND FOODSERVICE PRODUCT SPECIFICATIONS» (PDF). Tabasco.com. February 20, 2021. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ a b Edwards, Bob (November 29, 2002). «Tabasco Hot History». NPR. Retrieved June 7, 2008.
- ^ «Tabasco Cookbook». www.1stcavmedic.com.
- ^ «Tabasco and the war against bland military meals». National Museum of American History. April 29, 2015. Retrieved April 1, 2017.
- ^ Winek, C. L.; Markie, D. C.; Shanor, S. P. (1982). «Pepper Sauce Toxicity». Drug and Chemical Toxicology. 5 (2): 89–113. doi:10.3109/01480548209017772. PMID 7128479.
- ^ «Tabasco turns 150! Here are 10 fun facts about this historic hot sauce». today.com. Retrieved December 28, 2019.
- ^ Brittany (March 21, 2018). «What No One Tells You About TABASCO®». Iberia Travel. Retrieved December 28, 2019.
- ^ «Tabasco». Bond Lifestyle. February 22, 2014. Retrieved March 6, 2021.
- ^ «Roswell’s on the ropes, so…can hot sauce save this show?». New York Post. April 7, 2000. Retrieved October 7, 2020.
Works cited[edit]
- Shevory, Kristina (March 31, 2007). «The Fiery Family». The New York Times. Retrieved June 7, 2008.
Further reading[edit]
- Bernard, Shane K. (2007). Tabasco, an illustrated history : the story of the McIlhenny family of Avery Island, 1868-2007 (1st ed.). Avery Island, LA: McIlhenny Co. ISBN 978-0-9797808-0-6. OCLC 190786081.
- Kurlansky, Mark (2002). Salt: A World History. Walker & Company. ISBN 0-8027-1373-4..
- Rothfeder, Jeffrey (2009). McIlhenny’s Gold : How a Louisiana Family Built the Tabasco Empire. New York. ISBN 978-0-06-184424-9. OCLC 1021153074.
External links[edit]
- Official website
- How It’s Made: Tabasco Sauce
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Original Tabasco red pepper sauce |
|
Type | privately held company |
---|---|
Industry | Food |
Founded | 1868; 155 years ago |
Founder | Edmund McIlhenny |
Key people |
Harold Osborn, CEO |
Products | Hot sauce and other condiments |
Brands | Tabasco |
Owner | McIlhenny family |
Number of employees |
About 200 (per company web site, August 2014) |
Heat | |
Scoville scale | 100–35,000 SHU |
Website | tabasco.com |
Tabasco is an American brand of hot sauce made from vinegar, tabasco peppers (Capsicum frutescens var. tabasco), and salt. It is produced by McIlhenny Company of Avery Island in south Louisiana, having been created over 150 years ago by Edmund McIlhenny.[1] Although tabasco peppers were initially grown only on Avery Island, they are now primarily cultivated in Central America, South America and Africa.[2] The Tabasco sauce brand also has multiple varieties including the original red sauce, habanero, chipotle, sriracha and Trinidad Moruga scorpion. Tabasco products are available in more than 195 countries and territories, and packaged in 36 languages and dialects.
History[edit]
A Tabasco advertisement from c. 1905. Note the cork-top bottle and diamond logo label, which is similar to those in use today.
According to the company’s official history, Tabasco was first produced in 1868 by Edmund McIlhenny,[3] a Maryland-born former banker who moved to Louisiana around 1840. However, as Jeffrey Rothfeder’s book McIlhenny’s Gold points out, some of the McIlhenny Company’s official history is disputed, and that the politician Maunsel White was producing a tabasco pepper sauce two decades before McIlhenny.[4] A 2007 book review by Mark Robichaux of The Wall Street Journal quotes Rothfeder’s book:
«The story actually begins in the pre-Civil War era with a New Orleans plantation owner named Maunsel White, who was famous for the food served at his sumptuous dinner parties. Mr. White’s table no doubt groaned with the region’s varied fare—drawing inspiration from European, Caribbean, and Cajun sources—but one of his favorite sauces was of his own devising, made from a pepper named for its origins in the Mexican state of Tabasco. White added it to various dishes and bottled it for his guests. Although the McIlhennys have tried to dismiss the possibility, it seems clear now that in 1849, a full two decades before Edmund McIlhenny professed to discover the Tabasco pepper, White was already growing Tabasco chilies on his plantation.»[4]
Rothfeder cited January 26, 1850, letter to the New Orleans Daily Delta newspaper crediting White as having introduced «Tobasco red pepper» (sic) to the southern United States and asserting that the McIlhenny was at least inspired by White’s recipe.[4] Jean Andrews, in her book «Peppers: The Domesticated Capsicums», goes further to declare—citing United States Circuit Court testimony from 1922—that prior to his death in 1862, «White gave some [pepper] pods, along with his recipe, to his friend Edmund McIlhenny, during a visit to White’s Deer Range Plantation.»[5] To distribute his, Edmund McIlhenny initially obtained unused cologne bottles from a New Orleans glass supplier. On his death in 1890, McIlhenny was succeeded by his eldest son, John Avery McIlhenny, who expanded and modernized the business, but resigned after only a few years in order to join Theodore Roosevelt’s 1st US Volunteer Cavalry Regiment, the Rough Riders.[6] On John’s departure, brother Edward Avery McIlhenny, a self-taught naturalist fresh from an Arctic adventure, assumed control of the company and also focused on expansion and modernization, running the business from 1898 until his death in 1949. Walter S. McIlhenny in turn succeeded his uncle Edward Avery McIlhenny, serving as president of McIlhenny Company from 1949 until his death in 1985. Edward McIlhenny Simmons then ran the company as president and CEO for several years, remaining as board chairman until his death in 2012.[7] Paul McIlhenny became company president in 1998 and was chairman until his death in 2013.[8] In 2012 McIlhenny cousin Tony Simmons assumed the company’s presidency and in June 2019 his cousin Harold Osborn was chosen as the next president and CEO.[9][10] McIlhenny was one of just a few U.S. companies to have received a royal warrant of appointment that certified the company as a supplier to Queen Elizabeth II. McIlhenny was one of the 850 companies around the world that have been officially designated as suppliers to the queen by such warrants. The warrant held was «Supplier of Tabasco HM The Queen — Master of the Household — Granted in 2009».[11] In 2005, Avery Island was hit hard by Hurricane Rita, and the family constructed a 17-foot (5.2 m)-high levee around the low side of the factory and invested in back-up generators.[12]
Production[edit]
Tabasco pepper mash aging in barrels on Avery Island, Louisiana.
Originally all peppers used in Tabasco sauce were grown on Avery Island. Over time growers were selected throughout Louisiana to accommodate demand and during the 1960’s the company established farms in various Latin American countries. As of 2013 peppers grown on the Island are used to produce seed stock, which is then shipped to foreign growers.[12] More predictable weather and readily available farmland in these locales allow a constant year-round supply. This ensures the availability of peppers should severe weather or other problems occur at a particular growing location. Following company tradition, peppers are picked by hand. To ensure ripeness, pickers compare peppers to a little red stick (le petit bâton rouge); peppers that match the color of the stick are then introduced into the sauce production process. Peppers are ground into a mash on the day of harvest and placed along with salt in white oak barrels previously used for whiskey of various distilleries.[13] To prepare the barrel, the inside of the barrel is de-charred (top layer of wood is removed), torched, and cleaned, to minimize the presence of any residual whiskey. The barrels are then used in warehouses on Avery Island for aging the mash. After aging for up to three years, the mash is strained to remove skins and seeds. The resulting liquid is then mixed with distilled vinegar, stirred occasionally for a month, and then bottled as a finished sauce.[14] Tabasco has released a Tabasco reserve edition with peppers aged for up to eight years, mixed with wine vinegar.[15] Tabasco Diamond Reserve Edition was a limited bottling released in 2018 to commemorate the brand’s 150th anniversary. This sauce consists of peppers that have been aged for up to fifteen years, then mixed with sparkling white wine vinegar.[16] For many years the salt used in Tabasco production came from the Avery Island salt dome, the largest such structure along the Louisiana coast.[17]
Varieties[edit]
A few of the varieties of Tabasco sauce, with the original on the far right.
Several sauces are produced under the Tabasco brand name.[18] A few of the varieties include:
- Buffalo Style Hot Sauce
- Cayenne garlic
- Chipotle-based smoked
- Family Reserve
- Habanero
- Jalapeño-based green
- Original Red sauce
- Raspberry Chipotle
- Roasted Pepper sauce
- Rocoto pepper sauce
- Scorpion sauce
- Sriracha
- Sweet & Spicy
The habanero, chipotle, and garlic sauces include the tabasco peppers blended with other peppers, whereas the jalapeño variety does not include tabasco peppers. None of these sauces, however, has the three-year aging process the flagship product uses. The brand also produces a selection of Tabasco Chocolate.
Spiciness[edit]
Tabasco Scorpion Sauce is the hottest sauce of the Tabasco brand, reaching up to 35,000 Scoville units.
Sauce | Scoville units[19] | Notes |
---|---|---|
Tabasco Pepper Sauce | 2,500–5,000 | Original flagship variety |
Habanero Sauce | 7,000+ | |
Chipotle Sauce | 1,500–2,500 | Chipotle-based sauce that also features pepper pulp created as part of the production of the original sauce |
Cayenne Garlic Sauce | 1,200–2,400 | blends milder peppers in with the tabasco peppers |
Green Jalapeño Sauce | 600–1,200 | Green pepper sauce |
Sweet & Spicy Sauce | 100–300 | Mildest of all the sauces |
Scorpion Sauce | 35,000 | The hottest of the sauces. The pepper itself can reach up to 2,000,000 Scoville units |
Packaging[edit]
Tabasco sauce highlighted in an MRE, middle right
Tabasco brand pepper sauce is sold in more than 195 countries and territories and is packaged in 36 languages and dialects.[3] The Tabasco bottle is still modeled after the cologne-style bottles used for the first batch of sauce in 1868.[12][3] As many as 720,000 two-ounce (57 ml) bottles of Tabasco[20] sauce are produced daily at the Tabasco factory on Avery Island. Bottles range from the common two-ounce and five-ounce (59 ml and 148 ml) bottles, up to a 1-US-gallon (3.8 l; 0.83 imp gal) jug for food service businesses, and down to a 1⁄8-US-fluid-ounce (3.7 ml) miniature bottle. There are also 0.11-US-fluid-ounce (3.3 ml) portion control (PC) packets of Tabasco sauce. One-eighth-ounce bottles of Tabasco, bearing the presidential seal, are served on Air Force One.[12] The US military has included Tabasco sauce in Meals, Ready-to-Eat (MREs) since the 1980s. The Australian, British and Canadian armies also issue small bottles of Tabasco sauce in their rations.[21]
Uses[edit]
McIlhenny Company produces Tabasco brand products that contain pepper seasoning, including popcorn, nuts, olives, mayonnaise, mustard, steak sauce, Worcestershire sauce, soy sauce, teriyaki sauce, marinating sauce, barbecue sauce, chili sauce, pepper jelly, and Bloody Mary mix. McIlhenny Company also permits other brands to use and advertise Tabasco sauce as an ingredient in their products (a common marketing practice called «co-branding»), including Spam, Hormel chili, Slim Jim beef sticks, Heinz ketchup, A1 steak sauce, Plochman’s mustard, Lawry’s salt, Zapp’s potato chips, Heluva Good dip, and Vlasic Pickles. Cheez-It crackers for a long time used McIlhenny’s Tabasco Green Pepper Sauce until 2018, when Kellogg’s replaced it with their own hot sauce. The original red Tabasco sauce has a shelf life of five years when stored in a cool and dry place; other Tabasco flavors have shorter shelf lives.[citation needed][22] Tabasco appeared on the menu of NASA’s Space Shuttle program and went into orbit on the Shuttles.[23] It was on Skylab and on the International Space Station and is popular with astronauts as a means of countering the blandness of food in space.
Cookbooks[edit]
During the Vietnam War, Brigadier General Walter S. McIlhenny issued The Charlie Ration Cookbook.[24] (Charlie ration or «C-Rats» was the name for the field meal then given to troops.) This cookbook came wrapped around a two-ounce bottle of Tabasco sauce in a camouflaged, water-resistant container. It instructed troops how to mix C-rations to make such meals as «Combat Canapés» or «Breast of Chicken under Bullets.»[23] Soldiers also requested their families to send them Tabasco sauce in «care packages» from home. During the 1980s, the U.S. military began to include miniature bottles of Tabasco sauce in its MREs. Eventually, miniature bottles of Tabasco sauce were included in two-thirds of all MRE menus.[25] During the same period, McIlhenny Company issued a new military-oriented cookbook using characters from the comic strip Beetle Bailey. Titled The Unofficial MRE Cookbook, it was offered free of charge to U.S. troops.
Toxicity[edit]
In a 1982 article titled «Pepper Sauce Toxicity» Tabasco pepper sauce’s toxicity was evaluated based on red peppers and vinegar. Sprague-Dawley rats (lab rats) were tested on. The oral median lethal dose in male lab rats was determined to be 23.58 mL/kg body weight (BW) with an upper limit of 29.75 mL/kg BW and a lower limit of 18.70 mL/kg BW. The median lethal dose in the female lab rats was found to be 19.52 mL/kg BW (15.64 mL/kg BW lower, 24.35 mL/kg BW upper). The sauce was found to be a mild skin irritant and a moderate to severe eye irritant. The toxicity to the eye is mainly caused by vinegar.[26]
In art and culture[edit]
In 1894 composer George W. Chadwick composed the Burlesque Opera of Tabasco,[27] a musical comedy that conductor Paul Mauffray revived in 2018 with support from McIlhenny Company. Tabasco has appeared in many movies and cartoons,[28] as well as on television. It featured in two James Bond films in the 1970s, The Man with the Golden Gun and The Spy Who Loved Me,[29] as well as a shot of the iconic bottle in Sidney Lumet’s 1974 film Murder on the Orient Express. Some appearances date as far back as the Our Gang short Birthday Blues in 1932 and Charlie Chaplin’s Modern Times in 1936. In Back to the Future Part III, the saloon bartender uses Tabasco as an ingredient for an instant hangover cure he calls «wake-up juice». Tabasco sauce was also an important element in the television series Roswell about alien/human hybrid teenagers who craved foods that were sweet and spicy and often carried bottles of Tabasco sauce with them. When the network tried to cancel the series in the first season, thousands of fans mailed bottles of Tabasco to the network to show their support.[30] The series continued for three seasons.
See also[edit]
- Condiment
- List of brand name condiments
- List of hot sauces
- Tabasco Road
- Water pepper
References[edit]
- ^ «Tabasco Sauce History and Lore». thespruceeats.com. Retrieved August 31, 2021.
- ^ «Tabasco Hot Sauce and the Fate of Louisiana’s Shorelines». sierraclub.org. March 14, 2018. Retrieved March 18, 2022.
- ^ a b c «The History of Tabasco Brand». Tabasco. Retrieved January 6, 2021.[non-primary source needed]
- ^ a b c Robichaux, Mark (October 10, 2007). «Ingredients of a Family Fortune». Wall Street Journal. Retrieved July 1, 2018.
- ^ Andrews, Jean (1995). Peppers: The Domesticated Capsicums (New ed.). Austin: University of Texas Press. ISBN 0-292-70467-4. OCLC 31295102.
- ^ «Some Like It Avery Hot». The Economist. March 24, 2011. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved December 31, 2021.
- ^ «Tabasco Company CEO–Chairman Ned Simmons dies at 83». WWLTV Eyewitness News Report. Archived from the original on December 28, 2013.
- ^ «Paul McIlhenny». CNN News. February 24, 2013. Retrieved February 24, 2013.
- ^ «Lead Changes for Tabasco, McIlhenny Company». KATC.com. Archived from the original on July 9, 2013. Retrieved March 6, 2013.
- ^ «Incoming Tabasco CEO Harold Osborn Embraces his Early Start». New Orleans City Business. July 15, 2019. Retrieved July 24, 2019.
- ^ «Search Members’ Directory | Royal Warrant Holders Association». www.royalwarrant.org.
- ^ a b c d Belson, Ken (February 3, 2013). «Tabasco’s Ties to Football Burn Deep». The New York Times. Retrieved July 24, 2019.
- ^ «About Our Barrels». Tabasco® Brand. Retrieved December 31, 2021.[non-primary source needed][non-primary source needed]
- ^ Shevory 2007, pp. B1–B4
- ^ «Product: Tabasco Reserve Pepper Sauce (Grab It While You Can)». thenibble.com. Archived from the original on May 1, 2018. Retrieved October 11, 2011.
- ^ Wyatt, Megan (April 23, 2018). «This gourmet Tabasco sauce will set tongues and wallets on fire». USA Today.
- ^ «Avery Island». 64 Parishes. Retrieved December 28, 2019.
- ^ «Hot Sauces | Food Products | Tabasco® Brand». Tabasco.[non-primary source needed]
- ^ «Scoville Chart». Retrieved February 17, 2021.[non-primary source needed]
- ^ Shevory 2007, p. B1
- ^ Graham-Harrison, Emma (February 18, 2014). «The eat of Battle – how the worlds armies get fed». The Guardian. Retrieved September 1, 2017.
- ^ «TABASCO® BRAND FOODSERVICE PRODUCT SPECIFICATIONS» (PDF). Tabasco.com. February 20, 2021. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ a b Edwards, Bob (November 29, 2002). «Tabasco Hot History». NPR. Retrieved June 7, 2008.
- ^ «Tabasco Cookbook». www.1stcavmedic.com.
- ^ «Tabasco and the war against bland military meals». National Museum of American History. April 29, 2015. Retrieved April 1, 2017.
- ^ Winek, C. L.; Markie, D. C.; Shanor, S. P. (1982). «Pepper Sauce Toxicity». Drug and Chemical Toxicology. 5 (2): 89–113. doi:10.3109/01480548209017772. PMID 7128479.
- ^ «Tabasco turns 150! Here are 10 fun facts about this historic hot sauce». today.com. Retrieved December 28, 2019.
- ^ Brittany (March 21, 2018). «What No One Tells You About TABASCO®». Iberia Travel. Retrieved December 28, 2019.
- ^ «Tabasco». Bond Lifestyle. February 22, 2014. Retrieved March 6, 2021.
- ^ «Roswell’s on the ropes, so…can hot sauce save this show?». New York Post. April 7, 2000. Retrieved October 7, 2020.
Works cited[edit]
- Shevory, Kristina (March 31, 2007). «The Fiery Family». The New York Times. Retrieved June 7, 2008.
Further reading[edit]
- Bernard, Shane K. (2007). Tabasco, an illustrated history : the story of the McIlhenny family of Avery Island, 1868-2007 (1st ed.). Avery Island, LA: McIlhenny Co. ISBN 978-0-9797808-0-6. OCLC 190786081.
- Kurlansky, Mark (2002). Salt: A World History. Walker & Company. ISBN 0-8027-1373-4..
- Rothfeder, Jeffrey (2009). McIlhenny’s Gold : How a Louisiana Family Built the Tabasco Empire. New York. ISBN 978-0-06-184424-9. OCLC 1021153074.
External links[edit]
- Official website
- How It’s Made: Tabasco Sauce
Русский[править]
Морфологические и синтаксические свойства[править]
падеж | ед. ч. | мн. ч. |
---|---|---|
Им. | таба́ско | таба́ско |
Р. | таба́ско | таба́ско |
Д. | таба́ско | таба́ско |
В. | таба́ско | таба́ско |
Тв. | таба́ско | таба́ско |
Пр. | таба́ско | таба́ско |
та—ба́—ско
Существительное, неодушевлённое, мужской род, несклоняемое (тип склонения 0 по классификации А. А. Зализняка).
Корень: —.
Произношение[править]
- МФА: [tɐˈbaskə]
Семантические свойства[править]
Значение[править]
- разновидность кайеннского перца (лат. Capsicum frutescens), выращиваемый главным образом в Южной Америке, активным ингредиентом которого является капсаицин ◆ Красный перец ― не единственный перец, применяющийся в американской кухне. Куда же без черного, белого, кайенского? А еще ― паприка, чили, табаско, халапеньо… Н. В. Карпова, «Письмо из Америки об американской кухне», 1999 г. [НКРЯ]
- гастрон. мексиканский острый соус из кайенского перца, уксуса и соли ◆ Отсутствует пример употребления (см. рекомендации).
Синонимы[править]
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Гиперонимы[править]
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Родственные слова[править]
Ближайшее родство | |
Этимология[править]
Происходит от ??
Фразеологизмы и устойчивые сочетания[править]
Перевод[править]
Список переводов | |
Анаграммы[править]
- абакост