Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Greatest hot sauce in America, owned by the most clueless CEO in America

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Greatest hot sauce in America, owned by the most clueless CEO in America

    Anyone else love Sriracha (aka hot cock sauce) on everything they eat?

    The highly unusual company behind Sriracha, the world’s coolest hot sauce – Quartz

    If David Tran were a more conventional CEO, he would be a fixture at conferences, a darling of magazine profiles, and a subject of case studies in the Harvard Business Review. Sriracha hot sauce, made by Huy Fong Foods, which Tran founded 33 years ago in Los Angeles, is one of the coolest brands in town. There are entire cookbooks written to celebrate Sriracha’s versatility; memorabilia ranging from iPhone covers to t-shirts and all sorts of other swag; a documentary in the works to chronicle its rise; and innumerable imitators. Sriracha sales last year reached some 20 million bottles to the tune of $60 million dollars, percentage sales growth is in the double digits each year, and it does all this without spending a cent on advertising.
    +
    Yet Tran shuns publicity, professes not to care about profits, hardly knows where his sauces are sold, and probably leaves millions of dollars on the table every year. His dream, Tran tells Quartz, “was never to become a billionaire.” It is “to make enough fresh chili sauce so that everyone who wants Huy Fong can have it. Nothing more.”
    +
    Product before profit

    Today hot sauce is an emerging global business. The industry, which is among the 10 fastest growing in the US, now rakes in over $1 billion a year in global sales. But when Tran arrived in Los Angeles back in 1980, he was both jobless and hot-sauce-less. Having recently arrived from Vietnam, Tran found it near impossible to find a spicy additive worthy of his palate. The Southeast Asian community in Los Angeles, he soon realized, was suffering from the same hot sauce withdrawal.
    +
    In a matter of months, he had arrived at his rendition of Sriracha, a version of the Thai sauce made with hybrid jalapeño peppers (red or sometimes orange in color), vinegar, sugar, salt, and garlic, and was delivering it to local markets throughout the city. Soon thereafter, he was packaging it into its now unmistakable clear bottles with the rooster logo and green caps.
    +
    Sriracha Flikr
    But the only hope he ever harbored was to provide Vietnamese immigrants with a hot sauce worthy of their pho soup. Growing a bona fide business wasn’t an afterthought—it wasn’t a thought at all. “I started the business with my eyes closed. There were no expectations at all,” he said.
    +
    He still runs it in much the same way: with his eyes closed. He says he has not once hiked the wholesale price at which he sells Sriracha—a number he won’t share with anyone—no matter that inflation has more than tripled food prices since 1980. He can’t tell you where Sriracha is being sold, because all he knows is that Huy Fong has ten distributors, to whom he has handed off his hot sauce for over 10 years now. “We don’t have a detailed record on where it’s being sold,” Tran admits. Griffin Hammond, who is making the documentary about Sriracha, tells Quartz that as far as he knows, Sriracha is available in the US, Canada and Europe. “But it’s probably sold elsewhere, too,” he conceded. “At the very least, I know that on the bottle there is English, Chinese, Vietnamese, French and Spanish.”
    +
    Tran also learned only recently that Sriracha has become a popular ingredient among sushi chefs, who have been using it to spice up spicy tuna rolls for years. “I didn’t know until one of my distributors told me,” Tran said. In fact, says Hammond, it’s “almost always the spicy ingredient in spicy tuna rolls these days. It probably makes up a pretty significant portion of their sales.”
    +
    Sushi chefs aren’t the only ones. Restaurant chain P.F. Chang, which has 204 branches in the US and worldwide, offers Sriracha-flavored dishes. Chef David Chang (no relation to P.F. Chang’s) has bottles of Sriracha on every countertop of his Momofuku Noodle Bar restaurant in New York. Bon Appétit magazine declared the sauce the ingredient of the year back in 2010, and Cook’s Illustrated called it the best-tasting hot sauce in 2012. Though it didn’t win, Sriracha was one of three new flavors chosen in Lays potato chips’ new flavor contest last year.
    +
    Sriracha Lays
    Tran is, of course, flattered by all the fandom. He spends time every day reading through bucket-loads of emails, the bulk of which chronicle new and often unthinkable ways in which patrons use his chili sauce. One, he recalled, involved macaroni and cheese, a pairing Tran has never tried—he still almost exclusively eats it on his pho.
    +
    Chili-driven growth

    Demand is such that Huy Fong—which also makes Chili Garlic and Sambal Oelek, two significantly less popular hot sauces—recently purchased a new 650,000-square-foot (60,000 sq m) factory just to process and bottle its Sriracha. It’s quite the upgrade: the current facility produces 3,000 bottles every hour, 24 hours a day and six days a week, and the new one will have two-and-a-half times that capacity.
    +
    But the company’s biggest obstacle to growth isn’t manufacturing space. It’s raw materials.
    +
    Chili peppers
    Even the 100 million pounds of chilies that Huy Fong harvested last year wasn’t enough.Reuters/ Beawiharta Beawiharta
    Most commercially distributed hot sauces are made with dried chilies to make it easier to harvest, process and bottle the product at scale. McIlhenny, the maker of Tabasco, for example, buys its chilies from producers around the globe. But Sriracha is—and always always has been—made with fresh chilies. It’s what separates it from the competition, says Tran.
    +
    One of the few data points Tran will reveal about Huy Fong is that it processed some 100 million pounds (45 million kilograms) of fresh chilies last year over the course of its harvest season, which lasts only 10 weeks and provides for the entirety of the company’s yearlong Sriracha sales. ”We can only grow as quickly as our ability to harvest chilies grows,” Tran said.
    +
    His unwillingness to compromise on quality means that the chilies for Sriracha need to be processed within a day of being picked. So Huy Fong’s Rosemead factory sits only an hour away from Underwood Family Farms, which has been the company’s only chili supplier for the past 20 years. Its new plant in Irwindale is only a few miles further away. Finding new land fit for further chili harvesting has proved difficult—the land needs not only to be vast, but also fit for the purpose. “I can’t buy land that’s being used to harvest oranges,” Tran explained. “It’s not right for chilies.”
    +
    The other upshot of the high demand is that in 33 years, according to Tran, Huy Fong Foods has neither employed a single salesman nor spent a cent on advertising. Advertising would merely widen the gap between demand and supply even further. ”I don’t advertise, because I can’t advertise,” Tran explained.
    +
    Huy Fong also doesn’t have a Twitter, Facebook or Google Plus account, and its website is bare-boned. As a result, patrons of Sriracha tend to know little if anything about the company whose product they consume by the gallon. “It’s all been word of mouth,” Hammond says. It takes little more than a glance at the bottle to learn that Sriracha is currently made in Rosemead, California, but “most people still think Sriracha comes from Asia.”
    +
    Many people also have to dodge the growing pool of Huy Fong Sriracha copycats, which range from knockoffs with sharks instead of roosters on the bottle, to virtually indistinguishable mimicries. Tran’s lawyer, Rod Berman, an expert in intellectual-property rights, told Bloomberg he now writes four to five infringement complaints for the company every year.
    +
    The reluctant mogul

    Talking to Tran is a bit like pulling teeth. He only began granting interviews and extensive press access recently. His assistant and operations manager, Donna Lam, accompanies him on interview calls. His English is slow and calculated, and he often has to have more complicated questions and comments translated so he can properly answer—or slyly circumvent—them. Try to ply historical growth numbers from him, and you’ll hit a wall—he doesn’t share them. All he’s willing to concede is that sales have grown steadily and in the double-digit range since he started bottling Sriracha 33 years ago.
    +
    Tran doesn’t want anyone to know how fast Huy Fong is growing for fear that more people will show up at his doorstep with business pitches he doesn’t care to hear and growth plans he couldn’t be less interested in. He says a number of investors have already approached with piles of cash and lofty promises, even full-on offers to buy the company on the spot. Tran has turned them all away. ”People who come here are never interested in the product, only in the profits,” he laments.

  • #2
    Totally dig it although I won't say it goes on everything. It's in the house, though, and the shopping list. Staple item.
    "This aggression will not stand, man!" Jeff Lebowski
    "The only true currency in this bankrupt world is what you share with someone else when you're uncool." Lester Bangs

    Comment


    • #3
      Haven't seen it in any store in India, but I can guess it's good. I'm game for hot pickles and sauces.

      You guys should try out 'The Ghost Hot Sauce - With Bhut Jolokia Peppers', made from the world's hottest chilli, cultivated in Assam, Nagaland and in some places of Manipur. It's expensive with it's going rate currently at $15-20/kg.

      The Bhut Jolokia is always on my list of to buy items whenever I visit home. I usually get the dry one, and make pickle on my own. The scent is fabulous. It's so hot that many people have cursed me over the years, when, without any prior warning I played them to taste it. :)
      Politicians are elected to serve...far too many don't see it that way - Albany Rifles! || Loyalty to country always. Loyalty to government, when it deserves it - Mark Twain! || I am a far left millennial!

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by Oracle View Post
        Haven't seen it in any store in India, but I can guess it's good. I'm game for hot pickles and sauces.

        You guys should try out 'The Ghost Hot Sauce - With Bhut Jolokia Peppers', made from the world's hottest chilli, cultivated in Assam, Nagaland and in some places of Manipur. It's expensive with it's going rate currently at $15-20/kg.

        The Bhut Jolokia is always on my list of to buy items whenever I visit home. I usually get the dry one, and make pickle on my own. The scent is fabulous. It's so hot that many people have cursed me over the years, when, without any prior warning I played them to taste it. :)
        I've been meaning to try the Bhut Jolokia, but I need to write my will first I don't really see myself finishing an entire bottle of sauce though.

        Sriracha's selling point isn't intense hotness, my Indian palate is barely tickled by it. It has the perfect blend of hotness, garlic and salt that makes it tangy. If you've ever tried the Maggi chilli garlic sauce in India, it's like that only with less artificial crap and much better taste.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by S2 View Post
          Totally dig it although I won't say it goes on everything. It's in the house, though, and the shopping list. Staple item.
          For me it goes with pretty much everything that is not sweet. It's the key ingredient to my packed lunches at the office.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by cataphract View Post
            I've been meaning to try the Bhut Jolokia, but I need to write my will first I don't really see myself finishing an entire bottle of sauce though.
            I am used to it, as Ghost Chilli pickles are a part of my diet since my childhood. Pork is amazing with it, with a handful of 'lie pata' (kind of a leaf like mustard leaves, grown only in NE India and Bangladesh). However, if you are not used to it, don't try it too often, as it leads to stomach ulcer. Try it on your friends. Btw, the link I provided, I guess that sauce won't be too hot as I once watched in Discovery - a brand of ghost chilli pickles named Kick Your Bhut, where the manufacturer artificially reduce the amount of hotness to 25K Scoville units, IIRC. You can try that one out.

            Originally posted by cataphract View Post
            Sriracha's selling point isn't intense hotness, my Indian palate is barely tickled by it. It has the perfect blend of hotness, garlic and salt that makes it tangy. If you've ever tried the Maggi chilli garlic sauce in India, it's like that only with less artificial crap and much better taste.
            So, something like the Peri Peri sauce from Nandos? The Maggi one is crap. I keep some stock of Tabasco though, for emergency use.
            Politicians are elected to serve...far too many don't see it that way - Albany Rifles! || Loyalty to country always. Loyalty to government, when it deserves it - Mark Twain! || I am a far left millennial!

            Comment


            • #7
              [QUOTE=Oracle;936195
              So, something like the Peri Peri sauce from Nandos? The Maggi one is crap. I keep some stock of Tabasco though, for emergency use.[/QUOTE]

              Wouldn't know about the Nandos sauce, I'm vegetarian. Tabasco is ok as an add-on, never as the sole hot sauce. Simple hotness doesn't cut it, you need garlic/salt. Btw tabasco+tequila make an excellent shot.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by cataphract View Post
                Wouldn't know about the Nandos sauce, I'm vegetarian. Tabasco is ok as an add-on, never as the sole hot sauce. Simple hotness doesn't cut it, you need garlic/salt. Btw tabasco+tequila make an excellent shot.
                Nandos' sauce is vegetarian. It's good, try it out sometime. Tabasco + Tequila, never tried before, should be good.
                Politicians are elected to serve...far too many don't see it that way - Albany Rifles! || Loyalty to country always. Loyalty to government, when it deserves it - Mark Twain! || I am a far left millennial!

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by Oracle View Post
                  Haven't seen it in any store in India, but I can guess it's good. I'm game for hot pickles and sauces.

                  You guys should try out 'The Ghost Hot Sauce - With Bhut Jolokia Peppers', made from the world's hottest chilli, cultivated in Assam, Nagaland and in some places of Manipur. It's expensive with it's going rate currently at $15-20/kg.

                  The Bhut Jolokia is always on my list of to buy items whenever I visit home. I usually get the dry one, and make pickle on my own. The scent is fabulous. It's so hot that many people have cursed me over the years, when, without any prior warning I played them to taste it. :)
                  Being from India anything here would be like milk and honey for you unless you brought your own peppers with you. That I learned first hand while in college.
                  Removing a single turd from the cesspool doesn't make any difference.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by bonehead View Post
                    Being from India anything here would be like milk and honey for you unless you brought your own peppers with you. That I learned first hand while in college.
                    Politicians are elected to serve...far too many don't see it that way - Albany Rifles! || Loyalty to country always. Loyalty to government, when it deserves it - Mark Twain! || I am a far left millennial!

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Oracle View Post
                      The peppers on this side of the planet are not anywhere near as hot as what you are used to at home.
                      Removing a single turd from the cesspool doesn't make any difference.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Pussies.

                        BBC News - California city in Sriracha odour complaint

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          I must find or make this sauce myself. After reading the above posts I had to untie my tongue and find out how to pronounce Sriracha. ''See-rah-jaha. I must do this first in the future.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by dave lukins View Post
                            I must find or make this sauce myself. After reading the above posts I had to untie my tongue and find out how to pronounce Sriracha. ''See-rah-jaha. I must do this first in the future.
                            You should find it at any Chinese groceries nearby. If all else fails, http://www.amazon.co.uk/Sriracha-Hot...words=sriracha

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              "You should find it at any Chinese groceries nearby."

                              Shouldn't have to. Brits have a rather sophisticated distribution. Sriracha is found in any supermarket here in America. Would expect similar in Europe.
                              "This aggression will not stand, man!" Jeff Lebowski
                              "The only true currency in this bankrupt world is what you share with someone else when you're uncool." Lester Bangs

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X