PDA

View Full Version : How to carry your Sriracha



Papa D
01-22-2013, 19:21
I am very fond of the Korean Hot Sauce known as Sriracha - you may be too. I have discovered a great way to toss a weeks supply in your food bag by repackaging it in a kid's "squeezable fruit" container.
For the record, I support kids eating real fruit with no packaging but this container can be empties and re-filled with Sriracha really well. Hope this tips helps your tastebuds. Here is a link to the squeezable fruit and another for Sriracha (in the unlikely case you aren't familiar with it). Both are available at most big grocery stores.

PACKAGING:

www.rei.com/product/824244/peter-rabbit-organics-fruit-squeeze-pouch-4-oz,-mango/banana/orange?preferredSku=8242440003&cm_mmc=cse_froogle-_-pla-_-product-_-8242440003&mr:referralID=00e19d2a-64ea-11e2-97b3-001b2166becc (http://www.rei.com/product/824244/peter-rabbit-organics-fruit-squeeze-pouch-4-oz,-mango/banana/orange?preferredSku=8242440003&cm_mmc=cse_froogle-_-pla-_-product-_-8242440003&mr:referralID=00e19d2a-64ea-11e2-97b3-001b2166becc)

SRIRACHA:

www.culinarydistrict.com/14074.html (http://www.culinarydistrict.com/14074.html)

ENJOY!

tiptoe
01-22-2013, 19:40
Sriracha is potent and yummy, but I doubt I'd carry it on the trail. I happen to grow a lot of hot peppers and have several Thai hot plants drying near the woodstove. Once the moisture leaves, I just pulverize them (mortar and pestle or blender, depending), and store them in glass containers. The heat lasts for years, and a little goes a very long way.

Papa D
01-22-2013, 19:54
Sriracha is potent and yummy, but I doubt I'd carry it on the trail. I happen to grow a lot of hot peppers and have several Thai hot plants drying near the woodstove. Once the moisture leaves, I just pulverize them (mortar and pestle or blender, depending), and store them in glass containers. The heat lasts for years, and a little goes a very long way.

nice - I sometimes get a super extracted hot sauce (link below) that is incredibly hot - I dilute it with a little balsamic vinegar and store it in a vial - - it's beyond belief hot (and tasty)


You Tube:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=aC9aXL3Cdy4

Buy:
www.hotsauceworld.com/youcanhanthi.html

please be careful with this stuff - it will burn your eyes very easily - - be really, really careful, please

SCRUB HIKER
01-22-2013, 20:20
This doesn't answer your question, but I like Sriracha and I like trivia, so ... Sriracha isn't really Korean, or Thai, or Vietnamese, or any Asian-country based. It was invented by a Chinese immigrant in Los Angeles in the '80s. The inventor claims he created it "for the Asian community," but it quickly became ubiquitous and people use it for every type of cuisine, high and low, now. I've never taken it hiking because I didn't have a good way of storing it, but I like your idea.

This article has a good history of Sriracha (http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/20/dining/20united.html?pagewanted=all).

Papa D
01-22-2013, 20:32
This doesn't answer your question, but I like Sriracha and I like trivia, so ... Sriracha isn't really Korean, or Thai, or Vietnamese, or any Asian-country based. It was invented by a Chinese immigrant in Los Angeles in the '80s. The inventor claims he created it "for the Asian community," but it quickly became ubiquitous and people use it for every type of cuisine, high and low, now. I've never taken it hiking because I didn't have a good way of storing it, but I like your idea.

This article has a good history of Sriracha (http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/20/dining/20united.html?pagewanted=all).

Nice - thanks - I always thought it was Korean - good to learn things

Wise Old Owl
01-22-2013, 21:13
The Mio bottle can do the same thing just twist and it pops with a 1/2 inch hole

Papa D
01-22-2013, 21:15
The Mio bottle can do the same thing just twist and it pops with a 1/2 inch hole

hum - cool - I had to google Mio - never heard of it. thx

AllTheWayToMordor
01-22-2013, 22:13
Thank you, this is easily the most useful thread on the site (not sarcasm)!

Chaco Taco
01-22-2013, 22:13
I carried the whole bottle as is and it was fine. Did not last long. Many groceries sell it in the smaller 8 oz plastic jars as well

SOBO_Pace
01-22-2013, 22:20
Funny story... I asked my girlfriend to send me hot sauce in my first box and specifically asked that it be in a plastic bottle. I get to Gorham open my box and there it is 1.1 pounds of hot sauce.. careful what you ask for.. it just blew my mind, she saw me weighing everything even my tent stakes then she sends me a pound of hot sauce. It was funny, even the day hikers got a laugh about it. Hot sauce is my non-negotiable weight.:D

Papa D
01-22-2013, 22:27
I carried the whole bottle as is and it was fine. Did not last long. Many groceries sell it in the smaller 8 oz plastic jars as well

you did - seriously - cool - I carried a bottle of Cholula one time and thought that was sort of cumbersome

Deadeye
01-24-2013, 10:45
dehydrate it, then coarsely grind it

flemdawg1
01-24-2013, 11:07
Best Backpack-able hot sauce so far are the Texas Pete sauce packs you find at Chic-Fil-A.

Just found these though.
http://www.amazon.com/Chinese-Chili-Sauce-Packets--ship-Within/dp/B008WTMIC4/ref=sr_1_11?s=grocery&ie=UTF8&qid=1359040082&sr=1-11&keywords=hot+sauce+packets

Feral Bill
01-24-2013, 12:13
I hadn't thought of this before. I think I'll pack some in a small Nalgene.

max patch
01-24-2013, 12:14
I use sriracha at home, but on the trail I use tabasco in that really small bottle. Have to use too much sriracha to get the desired heat; tabasco is much more efficeient.

tiptoe
01-24-2013, 14:11
Has anyone seen or tried these? You gotta love the bottle artwork and sell copy.
http://www.hotsauceworld.com/hottest-hot-sauce.html

BuckeyeBill
01-24-2013, 17:40
If your looking for a great variety of hot sauces try The Hot Shoppe in Oswego, NY http://hotshoppe.com/

tiptoe
01-24-2013, 17:50
that's potty mouth hot sauce, for sure. good for a laugh. I guess I'll just stick with my little thai hots and ho chi minhs. never mix, never worry.

Tundra
01-24-2013, 18:11
This doesn't answer your question, but I like Sriracha and I like trivia, so ... Sriracha isn't really Korean, or Thai, or Vietnamese, or any Asian-country based. It was invented by a Chinese immigrant in Los Angeles in the '80s. The inventor claims he created it "for the Asian community," but it quickly became ubiquitous and people use it for every type of cuisine, high and low, now. I've never taken it hiking because I didn't have a good way of storing it, but I like your idea.

This article has a good history of Sriracha (http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/20/dining/20united.html?pagewanted=all).

Scrub Hiker,
i just wanted to take a quick second to thank you for your posts. They're always intelligent, level headed and often funny. Keep it up

Chaco Taco
01-24-2013, 18:54
but crappy hot sauce IMO

Best Backpack-able hot sauce so far are the Texas Pete sauce packs you find at Chic-Fil-A.

Just found these though.
http://www.amazon.com/Chinese-Chili-Sauce-Packets--ship-Within/dp/B008WTMIC4/ref=sr_1_11?s=grocery&ie=UTF8&qid=1359040082&sr=1-11&keywords=hot+sauce+packets

Rocket Jones
01-24-2013, 19:49
I just picked up a 3oz pack of the squeezable fruit from Wally World. The apple cinnamon wasn't bad, and afterwards I rinsed it well and it's air drying. The cap can be trimmed some - there's a lot of excess plastic there, and the bag itself seems pretty sturdy. For 88 cents I thought it worth a closer look.