Hot Shots Blog

Interesting Information from Hot Shots Distributing

Chile Pepper Fun Fact - Concentrated Heat!

Chile Pepper Fun Fact - Concentrated Heat! 

Weed and Chile Peppers have something in common...

Tinctures are concentrated liquid herbal extracts made from plants and used as herbal medicine. They are taken orally to relieve a wide range of health issues, or as a proactive way to support specific elements of your wellbeing. In chemistry terms, tinctures are solutions which use alcohol and water as a solvent.

Cannabis tincture appeared in the United States Pharmacopoeia until 1942 (Australia 1977, UK 1970s). In the 20th century cannabis lost its appeal as a medicinal product, largely due to the development of apparently suitable alternatives, such as the hypodermic needle, water-soluble analgesics and synthetic hypnotics. A major concern of the regulatory authorities at that time was the widespread recreational use of cannabis. The pharmacological target for cannabis, the endocannabinoid system, has been researched since its discovery in the 1980s.

Chile pepper tinctures are extremely popular right now and extremely easy to make. Fill a small jar with stemmed hot chile peppers (habaneros, jalapeños or Thai chilies work well) and cover with grain alcohol or high-proof vodka. Let soak for 3 days: strain. Then enjoy the burn! Weed and Chile Peppers have something in common.

Hot Sauce Fun Fact - Powerhouse Hot Sauce Collaboration

Hot Sauce Fun Fact - Powerhouse Hot Sauce Collaboration

Thrillist and GE Introduce a Hot Sauce So Hot, It’s Packaged in Jet Engine Super Materials!! 

Thrillist and GE teamed up in 2016 to create their own ultimate hot sauce. With the help of High River Sauces, Thrillist and GE created a hot sauce using one of the hottest peppers on Earth, the Trinidad Moruga Scorpion, which has a mean of more than 1.2 million Scoville heat units. Only 1,000 hot sauces were created.  

GE, the “leading authority on what it takes to contain the hottest substances in the world,” specially engineered a hot sauce bottle for the collaboration. The bottle’s design will feature Silicon Carbide (SiC) and nickel-based superalloys. SiC, one of the hardest materials in the world, is a key component of ceramic matrix composites. GE ceramic matrix composites engineered from this material are two-thirds lighter, stronger than metal at high temperatures, and able to withstand 2,400 degrees Fahrenheit. Nickel-based superalloys, a key element in GE’s 9HA gas turbine, are engineered to maintain super strength and resist oxidation. 

For the hot sauce itself, GE and Thrillist worked with Hot Sauce Hall of Fame founder, High River Sauces owner, and New York City and California Hot Sauce Expo organizer Steve Seabury. Seabury was chosen to help bring the idea of a hot sauce “supreme in both heat and flavor” to life. 

 

Hot Sauce Fun Fact... All things Texas are from Texas, right?

Hot Sauce Fun Fact... All things Texas are from Texas, right?

Or are they... 

TW GARNER FOOD COMPANY CLARIFIES ISSUE IN NEWS STORIES REGARDING TEXAS PETE OWNERSHIP

TW Garner Food Company noted an incorrect news story in several media outlets today that may have caused undue confusion about the brand ownership and status of the Texas Pete brand and product line. The incorrect story was regarding the sale of Vietti Foods to Zwanenberg Food Group USA, and it may have led some to believe that the Texas Pete brand was in some way affected by the acquisition.

Ann Garner Riddle, President of TW Garner stated, “TW Garner Food Company has always owned, and will forever own, the Texas Pete® brand. Vietti Foods has been a co-packer of two of Texas Pete canned products but has never had any ownership stake in the Texas Pete brand. The Texas Pete brand and products are not involved in any way in the acquisition of Vietti Foods by Zwanenberg Food Group USA. TW Garner Food Company is a family owned and family managed company. We plan to remain so with our 4th generation preparing for a future leadership role.”

Texas Pete products are manufactured in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, the company’s home since it was founded in 1929. TW Garner Food Company was founded and is owned and managed by the Garner family.

Hot Sauce Fun Fact - Taco Tuesday Version

Hot Sauce Fun Fact - Taco Tuesday Version  

You drizzle it on your tacos, but do you really know the history of hot sauce?

Surprisingly, its first appearances trace back to the ancient Aztecs in Mexico. They began cultivating chilis as early as 7000 BC, and hot sauce has been a key component of Mexican cuisine and culture ever since. 

But there is more to the world of hot sauce than meets the eye. There are countless chili varieties behind each unique hot sauce recipe to choose from, cooking methods, ingredients, and heat levels.

While it’s true that hot sauce has been used for thousands of years, European settlers had a part in the popularity of hot sauce, introducing new ingredients and spices into the mix. As buzz about the condiment grew, hot sauce chefs focused on specific, desirable flavors, experimenting, and breeding different peppers.

Hot Sauce Fun Fact - Tabasco Pepper Sauce

Hot Sauce Fun Fact - Tabasco Pepper Sauce 

What is that intoxicating aroma?

Did you know that Tabasco Sauce was originally packaged in cologne bottles... Now you do.

For a long time, there was a rumor that the first batches of Tabasco were bottled in used or discarded cologne bottles. Since then, the company has made it clear that the cologne bottles commissioned by founder Edmund McIlhenny were brand spankin' new. The bottles were then fitted with sprinkler caps (after people were found to be accidentally pouring too much onto their food!), corked, and sealed with green wax.

First bottled in 1868 by Mr. Edmund McIlhenny, it was sent just two hours away to neighboring New Orleans, and suddenly Cajun cooks had found the condiment to go with all the good stuff: red beans and rice, gumbo, crawfish étouffée, and more. Finally Southern households that didn't yet know how to season and spice with such abandon had something to bring a bland dish to life. Before long it was referred to as "that famous sauce Mr. McIlhenny makes."

Chile Pepper Fun Fact - The Tabasco Chile Pepper

Chile Pepper Fun Fact - The Tabasco Chile Pepper 

Ok, you know the sauce, but did you know it's an actual chile pepper? 

Best known for the sauce that bares its name, this pepper grows throughout the world. At maturity, the pepper measures one to two inches and is bright red. To create the famous tabasco sauce, the pepper is smashed and combined with salt and vinegar, which tempers the pepper's heat. Scoville heat units range from 30,000 to 60,000 SHU and the Scoville rating of Tabasco sauce is 2,500 to 5,000 — a mere fraction of its rating as a pepper. 

The tabasco pepper is a variety of the chili pepper species Capsicum frutescens, like the Naga Jolokia. It's a very pungent pepper grown mostly in the Gulf Coast states and Mexico. The word, "tabasco", is the name of a state in Mexico. The name of the pepper came first, which was later adopted by the famous hot sauce by McIlhenny Co.

Hot Sauce Fun Fact - Sriracha HOT Chili Sauce

Hot Sauce Fun Fact - Sriracha HOT Chili Sauce 

Did you know that Sriracha is actually a type or style of hot sauce, chile sauce made from a paste of chile peppers, distilled vinegar, garlic, sugar, and salt.

The Huy Fong Hot Sriracha Chili Sauce brand is the most widely popular and has global distribution. There are literally hundreds of Sriracha sauces on the market, but only one boasts the recognizable rooster and signature green cap! 

Hot Sauce Fun Fact - Spicy Micheladas

Hot Sauce Fun Fact - Spicy Micheladas

So, it's National Beer Day, what could be better than Hot Sauce & Beer together?

We all need a round of Spicy Micheladas

A Michelada, when made well, is one of the most refreshing and bracingly flavorful summer beer drinks out there. It's made from a mixture of cold light beer, fresh lime juice, hot sauce, and a savory ingredient like Worcestershire sauce, and the secret is all in striking the right balance.

CaJohn makes his with a healthy splash of Pickle Juice and uses a dark lager like Negra Modelo.

We sometimes like to kick up on the spice level with the addition of Ghost Pepper powder in and along the rimmer of Tajin.

Chile Pepper Fun Fact - Five Main Species of Chile Peppers

Chile Pepper Fun Fact - Five Main Species of Chile Peppers

Peppers, like any other plant-based food, originally came from a naturally growing, undomesticated plant. Wild peppers look more like berries than the peppers you’ll find in the supermarket today, and grow only in the New World, with their range spanning from the southern United States through Central and northern South America.

1) Capsicum annuum 

Most of the peppers you have encountered most likely are strains of Capsicum annuum, considering it contains more pepper varieties than any other species and can be found in cultivation all over the world. Popular Capsicum annuums include jalapenos, cayennes, serranos, plobanos, chili peppers, bell peppers, and most other sweet peppers.

2) Capsicum chinense 

The chinense species, sometimes referred to as the "bonnet pepper", is another mistakenly named pepper species. Chinense means that the plant is of Chinese origin; however, the wild variant of Capsicum chinense is native to the Caribbean and Yucatan peninsula of Mexico.

3) Capsicum frutescens 

Closely related to both Capsicum annuum and Capsicum chinense, this species has produced far fewer varieties and its peppers usually don’t get as big. This species is believed to have originated in South or Central America. The most well-known frutescens pepper is the tabasco, which is popularly grown and used to make Tabasco® sauce. Other noteworthy peppers include Thai peppers, African bird's eye and the malagueta pepper.

4) Capsicum baccatum 

While the other domesticated pepper species can be commonly found in cultivation throughout the Americas, baccatum peppers are mainly only popular in South American countries such as Peru and Brazil. These peppers are unique from varieties of other species as they have a notably citrus or fruity flavor and a pleasant fragrant smell. Most peppers of baccatum origin will have the prefix “aji” at the start of the name, such as the aji amarillo and aji omnicolor, and every baccatum pepper plant will have cream or yellow dimples on their flower pedals.

5) Capsicum pubescens 

Perhaps the most easily identifiable pepper species, pubescens pepper plants have deep purple flowers, large black seeds, and the stems and leaves are covered in small hairs. This is likely the first pepper to be domesticated, with its origins traced back to Peru before the Inca Empire. The pepper has been domesticated for so long that we don’t even know what wild ancestor this plant came from. The fruits tend to be large and have thick flesh, such as the manzano and locoto peppers. Despite originating so close to the equator, it is actually the most cold-tolerant pepper plant because it has been grown in high elevations in the Andes Mountains for thousands of years. If left to grow for many years, the plants can become huge, leading some to call it the tree pepper.

Hot Sauce Fun Fact - Sauce Ti-Malice

Hot Sauce Fun Fact - Sauce Ti-Malice

Sauce Ti-Malice or sos Ti-Malice (or sos Ti-Malis) in Creole, is a traditional Haitian sauce that is spicy and tasty, served hot or warm to accompany various dishes. 

Composed of onion, garlic, shallot, bell pepper, lime, tomato paste, Scotch Bonnet pepper, olive oil and pikliz vinegar. The vegetables are first fried off, and then after adding water, the sauce cooks for about 15 minutes. 

There are many variations of this recipe, and each family creates their own version. The above ingredients are typical, but other variations include adding herbs such as thyme or parsley, cloves, fresh or cubed chicken, meat broth, fresh tomatoes, and other peppers such as habaneros, in addition to Scotch Bonnet. 

Sos Ti-Malice is usually served on grains such as rice or corn, meat, poultry and seafood. 

This sauce brings out the flavor of dishes, and also complements vegetables. It is so popular that it is eaten with the majority of Haitian meals. 

Indeed, it is found in many recipes and moreover, it is often prepared for cooking meats, such as sòs poul (chicken in sauce), Haitian spaghetti, poul ak nwa (chicken with cashews) or diri kolé ak pwa (rice and beans).