Sriracha is also eaten in soup, on eggs and burgers. Jams, lollipops, and cocktails have all been made using the sauce,[3] and sriracha-flavored potato chips have been marketed.[4]
Origin
The sauce was first produced in the 1940s by a Thai woman named Thanom Chakkapak in the town of
Si Racha (or Sriracha), Thailand.[5][6] The Sriracha sauce itself may be an adaptation of a Cantonese garlic and chili sauce originally from
Shunde,
China. In the early 1900s,
Cantonese immigrants settled in Si Racha, and their garlic and chili sauce was sold in Thailand for decades before the first bottles of Sriraja Panich were produced.[7]
Variations
Thailand
In Thailand, the sauce is most often called sot Siracha (
Thai: ซอสศรีราชา) and only sometimes nam phrik Siracha (
Thai: น้ำพริกศรีราชา). Traditional Thai sriracha sauce tends to be tangier in taste, and runnier in texture than non-Thai versions.[6]
In a Bon Appétit magazine interview, US Asian-foods distributor Eastland Food Corporation asserted that the Thai brand of hot sauce Sriraja Panich, which Eastland distributes, is the original "sriracha sauce" and was created in Si Racha, Thailand, in the 1930s from the recipe of a housewife named Thanom Chakkapak.[6]
United States
In the United States, sriracha is associated with a
jalapeño-based sauce produced by Huy Fong Foods[8][9] and is sometimes referred to as "rooster sauce" or "cock sauce"[10] from the image of a
rooster on the bottle.[11] Other variations of sriracha have appeared in the U.S. market, including a sriracha that is aged in whiskey barrels.[12][13] The Huy Fong Foods Sriracha was first produced in the early 1980s for dishes served at American
phở restaurants.[9]
In 2022, Huy Fong Foods Sriracha sauce temporarily halted production due to a shortage of chili peppers, causing the price to increase to $30 a bottle or higher.[21] The halt in production lasted for over a year.[22][23]
In popular culture
In 2013, American filmmaker Griffin Hammond released Sriracha, a documentary about the origin and production of sriracha sauce.[24]
Rapper
Tech N9ne released the song Sriracha in 2016, in which he compares his style of rhyme to the condiment.
In 2017, the Korean trio Bang Chan, Changbin and Han debuted in the group 3Racha, taking inspiration from the sauce. Now they are part of the k-pop group
Stray Kids.
^Shyong, Frank (April 12, 2013).
"Sriracha hot sauce purveyor turns up the heat". Los Angeles Times. Archived from
the original on October 6, 2012. Retrieved June 29, 2013. Roland Foods in New York makes its own variety, Sriracha Chili Sauce, in a similarly shaped yellow-capped bottle featuring two dragons instead of a rooster.
Frito-Lay is testing a sriracha-flavored potato chip, and
Subway is experimenting with a creamy sriracha sauce for sandwiches.
^
abcNguyen, Andrea (March 4, 2013).
"The Original Sriracha". Bon Appétit. Retrieved June 29, 2015. The Thais also make many versions of [sriracha] sauce... which tend to be more liquid and pourable than Huy Fong's. Sriraja Panich has a lovely balance of bright chili heat, delicate sweetness, vinegary tang, and garlicky backnote.
^Usborne, Simon (November 20, 2013). "Sriracha hot sauce: Heated dispute". The Independent. London.
Archived from the original on 2022-05-24. Retrieved June 29, 2015. But like most obsessives, Erskine is fiercely loyal to 'rooster sauce' as some know the brand (in the US it is sometimes also called 'cock sauce').