, The Crossing Press, 1996.)
Much of what we know about
now-extinct brands of hot sauces comes from bottle collectors. There is not a
great body of material on the subject of collectible hot sauce bottles, but we
are indebted to Betty Zumwalt, author of Ketchup, Pickles, Sauces: 19th
Century Food in Glass, who dutifully catalogued obscure hot sauce bottles
found by collectors. Many bottles in the hands of collectors were uncovered from
archaeological digs and shipwrecks.
Other sources of information
about early hot sauces are city directories, which often contained
advertisements for sauces, and newspapers. We know from these sources that the
first bottled cayenne sauces appeared in Massachusetts around 1807. These were
probably homemade and similar to the English sauces with the silver labels.
Sometime between 1840 and 1860, J. McCollick & Company of New York City produced
a Bird Pepper Sauce in a large cathedral bottle that was nearly eleven inches
tall! This sauce is significant because it was probably made with the wild
chiles called chiltepins or bird peppers. We also know that in 1849, England's
Lea and Perrins Worcestershire Sauce was first imported into the United States
via the port of New York.
That year was also important in
the history of hot sauces because it marked the first recorded crop of tabasco
chiles, the vital ingredient of McIlhenny Company's Tabasco Pepper Sauce. That
crop was grown by a prominent Louisiana banker and legislator, Colonel Maunsell
White on his Deer Range Plantation. The New Orleans Daily Delta printed a
letter from a visitor to White's plantation, who reported, "I must not omit to
notice the Colonel's pepper patch, which is two acres in extent, all planted
with a new species of red pepper, which Colonel White has introduced into this
country, called Tobasco red pepper. The Colonel attributes the admirable health
of his hands to the free use of this pepper." Tobasco was an early misspelling
of Tabasco, the Mexican state.
Colonel White manufactured the
first hot sauce from the "Tobasco" chiles and advertised bottles of it for sale
in 1859. About this time, he gave some chiles and his sauce recipe to a friend,
Edmund McIlhenny, who promptly planted the seeds on his plantation on Avery
Island. McIlhenny's horticultural enterprise was interrupted by the Civil War
and invading Union troops from captured New Orleans. In 1863, McIlhenny and his
family abandoned their Avery Island plantation to take refuge in San Antonio,
Texas.
When the McIlhenny family
returned to Avery Island in 1865, they found their plantation destroyed and
their sugar cane fields in ruin. However, a few volunteer chile plants still
survived, providing enough seeds for McIlhenny to rebuild his pepper patch.
Gradually, his yield of pods increased to the point where he could experiment
with his sauce recipe, in which mashed chiles were strained, and the resulting
juice was mixed with vinegar and salt and aged in fifty-gallon white oak
barrels. In 1868, McIlhenny packaged his aged sauce in 350 used cologne bottles
and sent them as samples to likely wholesalers. The sauce was so popular that
orders poured in for thousands of bottles priced at one dollar each, wholesale,
which was quite a bit of money in those days.
In 1870, McIlhenny obtained a
patent on his Tabasco Brand (as it was now called) hot pepper sauce and by 1872
had opened an office in London to handle the European market. The increasing
demand for Tabasco sauce caused changes in the packaging of the product as the
corked bottles sealed with green wax were replaced by bottles with metal tops.
Around this same time, a cookbook
entitled Mrs. Hill's New Cookbook, by Annabella Hill of Georgia,
contained an interesting recipe for barbecue sauce that contained butter,
mustard, vinegar, black pepper, and red pepper--almost certainly cayenne. So it
is evident that there was a general tradition of home cooking with hot sauces in
the South. Mrs. Hill also included a recipe for a curry sauce using prepared
curry powder.
From an excavated wreck of the
good ship Bertrand, dated 1874, we know that Western Spice Mills of St.
Louis was making hot sauce around that time because 173 of their bottles were
uncovered. That same year (some say 1875), Eugene R. Durkee of Brooklyn, New
York, applied for a patent on a hexagonally-shaped "Chilli Sauce" bottle.
Although the patent application survives, no actual bottle has ever been found,
but E.R. Durkee & Company became a rather large spice and condiment company and
the brand name exists to this day. Around this same time, W.K. Lewis & Co. in
Boston was producing a pepper sauce in a square cathedral-shaped bottle.
In 1877, Willam H. Railton, a
Chicago businessman who owned the Chicago Preserving Works, began using a
maltese cross-shaped label for table sauces "prepared from a Mexican formula."
He applied for a trademark in 1883, and by 1884 he was buying large ads for his
Chili Colorow Sauce. Interestingly enough, although it was a "chili" sauce, the
advertising copy claimed: "It is expressly suitable for family dining,
possessing a fine, rich body of exquisite flavor and has neither the fiery nor
nauseous taste which characterizes most sauces." With a typical nineteenth
century patent medicine pitch, the copy went on to claim: "It relieves
indigestion and cures dyspepsia. Physicians recommend it highly."
During the 1880s and '90s,
several hot sauces sprang up, including C&D Peppersauce, manufactured by Chace
and Duncan in New York City in 1883, but we have nothing left but the bottle.
Sometime around 1900, the Bergman and Company Pioneer Pickle Factory in
Sacramento, California, began selling Bergman's Diablo Pepper Sauce in five-inch
tall bottles with narrow necks that resembled the typical hot sauce bottle of
today.
In 1893, it is said that Popie
Devillier developed his legendary hot sauce Hotter 'n Hell. Born in Southern
Louisiana in the "Bayou Country", Arthur "Popie" Devillier left home at the
ripe-old age of thirteen, settling into work as a lumberjack in one of the area
logging camps. According to his late great grandson, Kent Cashio, Popie
Devillier ("Popie" was a name usually given to a Cajun grandfather by his
grandson), became a cook for a lumber camp, taught the ropes by a French cook
and a Choctaw Indian assistant.
Relying on this Choctaw/Cajun
influence he created the sauce blending eight spices, including cloves, which
many of the workers placed in their mouth after a meal to ease the burn and
soothe the tongue. He then slow cooked the sauce to yield a spicy hot, yet full
flavored hot sauce. The sauce is not only a hot sauce, but a marinade and an
injector for meat and wild game.
Hotter 'n Hell was passed down
the family tree for more than ninety years, until 1992 when Mr. Cashio, seeing
the potential in the market for a recipe that had endeared itself to the
lumberjacks and families of the former French-owned Louisiana Territory,
introduced the product to the public as Popie's Hotter 'n Hell Sauce.
Tragically, Kent Cashio became terminally ill and in May, 1994, sold Popie's to
Cafe Companies, Inc. An instant hit, Cafe Louisiane Hotter 'n Hell Sauce, now
made in Baton Rouge, carries the legend of Popie to the future generations of
customers at the Cafe Louisiane Cajun Seafood and Oyster Bar, as well as
throughout the Bayou Country and beyond. The Cafe Companies has set up a royalty
for Mr. Cashio's children--another true legacy of Popie Devillier.
From hot sauce bottle collectors
we know that Koonyik Chilies Sauce appeared along the west coast of the United
States around 1900. About the same time, a Detroit company, Horton-Cato,
manufactured Royal Pepper Sauce in a bottle with a bulbous bottom. And sometime
shortly after 1889, Heinz produced Heinz's Tabasco Pepper Sauce in a elegant
bottle; but alas, even Heinz couldn't compete with the "real" Tabasco sauce.
After the death of Edmund
McIlhenny in 1890, the family business was turned over to his son John, who
immediately inherited trouble in the form of a crop failure. John attempted to
locate tabasco chiles in Mexico but could not find any to meet his
specifications. Fortunately, his father had stored sufficient reserves of pepper
mash, so the family business weathered the crisis. However, that experience
taught the family not to depend solely upon tabasco chiles grown in Louisiana.
Today, tabascos are grown under contract in Honduras, Colombia, and other
Central and South American countries, and the mash is imported into the United
States in barrels.
John McIlhenny was quite a
promoter and traveled all over the country publicizing his family's sauce. "I
had bill posters prepared," he once said, "and had large wooden signs in the
fields near the cities. I had an opera troupe playing a light opera. At
different times I had certain cities canvassed by drummers, in a house-to-house
canvass. I had exhibits in food expositions, with demonstrators attached. I gave
away many thousands of circulars and folders, and miniature bottles of Tabasco
pepper sauce."
In 1898, another Louisiana
entrepreneur (and former McIlhenny employee) named B. F. Trappey began growing
tabasco chiles from Avery Island seed. He founded the company B. F. Trappey and
Sons and began producing his own sauce, which was also called "Tabasco." The
McIlhenny family eventually responded to this challenge and a several
decades-long feud by receiving a trademark for their Tabasco® brand in 1906.
The trademark did not deter other
companies from using the name Tabasco in their products. In 1911, the Joseph
Campbell Company began selling Campbell's Tabasco Ketchup and described it as
"the appetizing piquancy of Tabasco Sauce in milder form."
Obviously noticing the success of
McIlhenny's Tabasco® Pepper Sauce, other companies sprang up all over the
country. Charles E. Erath of New Orleans began manufacturing Extract of
Louisiana Pepper, Red Hot Creole Peppersauce in bottles nearly eight inches tall
in 1916. A year later, La Victoria Foods began manufacturing Salsa Brava in Los
Angeles, California. In Louisiana in 1923, Baumer Foods began manufacturing of
Crystal Hot Sauce and in 1928 Bruce Foods started making Original Louisiana Hot
Sauce--two brands that are still in existence today.
The Louisiana hot sauce boom
continued when, in 1929, Trappey's expanded to two plants, one in Lafayette and
one in New Iberia. That same year, the McIlhenny family won a trademark
infringement suit against the Trappeys. From that time on, only the McIlhenny
sauce could be called "Tabasco," and competitors were reduced to merely
including tabasco chiles in their list of ingredients. The two companies had
competed with identically named sauces for thirty-one years.
Undoubtedly because of the Wall
Street collapse and the Great Depression, no hot sauce start-ups were uncovered
during our research for this book until the start of World War II. In 1941,
Henry Tanklage formed La Victoria Sales Company to market a new La Victoria
salsa line. He introduced red taco sauce, green taco sauce, and enchilada
sauce--the first of their kind in the United States. He took over the entire La
Victoria operation in 1946, which today has ten different hot sauces covering
the entire salsa spectrum, including Green Chili Salsa and Red Salsa Jalapeña.
In Texas, salsa manufacturing
began in 1947. David and Margaret Pace operated a small food packing operation
in the back of their liquor store in San Antonio. They were manufacturing
syrups, salad dressings, and jellies and sold their products door-to-door.
David, by trial and error, began to make picante sauce and test it on his
friends. When it was introduced commercially, it was so popular that the Paces
were forced to drop all other products and concentrate on the picante sauce. But
the salsa business was not easy.
"In '47 my sauce bottles exploded
all over the grocery shelves because I couldn't get the darned formula right,"
said David Pace in 1992. "In the '70s, the business exploded when the hippies
came along. No question but this health stuff made the whole category explode,
and it just tickles me to see these people take the ball and run with it."
During the '40s and '50s, hot
sauces were sold exclusively in small grocery stores, and manufacturers were
always searching for new products. In 1952 Henry Tanklage of La Victoria Foods
invented and introduced the first commercial taco sauce in the United States.
And in 1955, La Preferida began manufacturing a line of salsas. That same year,
incidentally, the first McDonald's opened.
The 1960s saw the rise of
ready-to-eat products such as TV dinners, supermarkets gaining ground over the
small, neighborhood grocery stores, and the increasing fascination with all
things "gourmet." Gourmet magazine, which had launched in 1941, and
Bon Appetit, launched in 1955, became the arbiters of American food tastes.
But where could one find the exotic ingredients for the many of the recipes that
appeared in those magazines? Cheese shops were the only incarnation of what
would later become gourmet shops, and they were rare. "In California," wrote
food historian Evan Jones, "cooks who bought esoteric ingredients did so mostly
through mail orders. Stores making and selling fresh pasta were unheard of."
A wave of food change swept the
country in the 1970s. Sometimes called the "whole foods movement," the trend
emphasized cooking with fresh, unadulterated ingredients. Vegetarianism
increased in popularity, health food stores sprang up all over, and a new
concept in selling food was launched--the gourmet retail shop, which specialized
in selling exotic, imported foods and products from smaller manufacturers that
were not available in the large supermarkets. The stage was set for yet another
boom in hot sauces, and this one was led by the smaller manufacturers.
In 1975, Patti Swidler of Tucson,
Arizona launched Desert Rose Salsa, a line that was specifically designed to be
sold in the specialty food shops. When her business took off, the reporters came
calling and Patti told them bluntly, "People are making salsa that is no longer
salsa. I still find people gravitate toward authentic flavors."
Four years later, in Austin,
Texas, Dan Jardine began production of Jardine's commercial salsa, perhaps
starting Austin's reputation (disputed by San Antonio) as the hot sauce capital
of America. "Austin is a unique place in the United States," he said. "There
seems to be a lot more salsa companies trying to start here." A count by
Austin American-Statesman food editor Kitty Crider in 1993 totaled
forty-eight Austin-made salsas.
Another Texas company, the El
Paso Chile Company, was started in 1980 by W. Park Kerr and Norma Kerr. "When my
mother and I started the El Paso Chile Company," Park said, "adding cilantro to
a basic salsa was considered innovative. Three years later, we came out with
cactus salsa--which has two kinds of green chiles and diced prickly pear
cactus--and everyone thought that was weird. Now everyone has knocked it off."
New salsas and hot sauces began
springing up all over the country and some manufacturers went for both the
gourmet and supermarket customers. Datil peppers and homemade sauces including
them have existed for centuries in St. Augustine, Florida. In 1981, Chris Way
opened Barnacle Bill's in St. Augustine, a fresh seafood restaurant, and he soon
made a hot sauce with the datil peppers to serve with his fish and other seafood
specialties. Each table had its own jar of Dat'l Do It sauce, but they began
disappearing at an alarming rate.
Way soon realized that his best
customers were stealing the bottles of hot sauce. But then he reasoned
that they had to steal it--because he had never offered it for sale!
About this same time, Chris was approached by one of his customers, who happened
to be a vice president of Wynn-Dixie, a huge supermarket chain. He liked the
Dat'l Do It sauce, he said, and if Chris was willing to upgrade his packaging,
the Wynn-Dixies would carry it. So was born the Dat'l Do It operation, which now
has nine products including Dat'l Do It Hot Sauce and Hellish Relish. Way has
also opened several retail Dat'l Do It shops of his own.
Between the years of 1982 and
1987, Mexican sauce sales jumped sixteen percent, and Mexican sauces suddenly
were at the top of the sauce and gravy category. In 1983, Panola Pepper Company
in Lake Providence, Louisiana, began with 2,000 gallons of sauce made by Bubber
Brown from his mother's recipe. That same year, Frank's Red Hot® Cayenne Pepper
Sauce was introduced by Durkee-French in an advertising blitz; Red Hot® would
eventually challenge Tabasco® for U.S. market share. And to prove just how far
afield salsa manufacturing had gone, in 1986 Miguel's Stowe Away in Vermont
launched a salsa line.
In April, 1986, Sauces & Salsas,
Ltd. began manufacturing the Montezuma® brand of hot pepper sauces and salsas in
Columbus, Ohio. The company was founded by coauthor Chuck and over the years
established the most diverse line of chile pepper sauces in the world, including
the nation's number one brown sauce, Smokey Chipotle®.
In 1987, Pace was peeved at Pet
over picante packaging. The largest salsa producer, Pace Foods of San Antonio,
sued its biggest competitor, Pet Food's Old El Paso. Pace claimed Pet had
imitated its label, the shape of the bottle, and even its slogan. Pace's slogan
was "Pick Up the Pace," while Pet's Old El Paso slogan was "Pick of the Picantes."
Pace should have been even more
upset at Rosarita's Salsatheir slogan was: "Enjoy a change of pace." Pace and
Pet settled out of court in January, 1988, after Old El Paso agreed to change
the bottle and label. Pace also launched its famous national television campaign
against its rival, where the cowboys mock the "made in New York City" attributes
of an imaginary rival sauce. The campaign caused Pace to gain major market
shares in the Midwest; coauthor Chuck reports that Pace Picante Sauce hurt his
Montezuma® sauces and became number one in the Ohio market.
In 1987, Pace saw a major rival
enter the fray as Geo. A. Hormel & Co. licensed the restaurant's name and
introduced Chi-Chi's brand; it would eventually capture a large share of the
market. The same year, Robert Spiegel, Dave DeWitt, and Nancy Gerlach founded
Chile Pepper magazine, which would become the major national publication to
feature hot sauces, their recipes, and advertisements for many manufacturers,
large and small.
The following year, Lisa Lammé
opened Le Saucier in Boston; it is believed to be the first retail shop devoted
to sauces and specializing in hot sauces. Macayo Foods of Phoenix introduced a
line of taco sauces in plastic pourable bottles that same year, and the first
National Fiery Foods Show was held in El Paso. That show, which started with a
mere thirty exhibitors, would expand to 250 exhibitors in 1996, showcasing
hundreds and hundreds of brands of sauces and salsas along the way.
Thirty-five sauce manufacturers
in Louisiana were producing about a hundred different brands of hot sauce in
1989, and that same year the first two U.S. chipotle sauces were launched by
U.S. manufacturers. Coauthor Chuck began selling Montezuma® Smokey Chipotle®,
and San Angel Autentica Salsa Chipotle was produced by San Angel Mexican Foods
in Stowe, Vermont; Don Peet and Manelick de la Parra were the founders. Over in
Cambridge, Massachusetts, Chris Schlesinger of the East Coast Grill began
manufacturing his Inner Beauty hot sauce, which resembled a Barbadian or
Trinidadian sauce. He made it specifically for chileheads, he said. "That's the
kind of person who likes roller coasters, fast cars, and stays up late looking
for excitement in his life. It's benign masochism...they experience danger
without actually having it."
Between 1985 and 1990, Mexican
sauce sales grew seventy-nine percent; between 1988 and 1992, the percentage of
American households buying salsa increased from 16 percent to 36 percent.
And despite the claims of Austin,
the real Mexican sauce capital of the U.S. is Los Angeles, which gobbled up 3.3
million gallons of it in 1990. This appetite was due to numerous barrio
immigrants living in east and central parts of the city.
In 1990, Pace Foods sent 2,000
bottles of their Pace Picante Sauce to U.S. troops in the Saudi Arabian desert.
"Many of the soldiers complain about their bland C-rations," said president Rod
Sands. The following year, the first Austin Chronicle Hot Sauce Contest
was held at the Travis County Farmer's Market. It was billed as Austin versus
San Antonio. "San Antonio hot sauce is world famous," said Mike Hood of the
San Antonio Current, "while Austin makes designer sauce for yuppies." Robb
Walsh of the Chronicle fired back: "San Antonio sauce is like Christmas, it only
comes in red and green." Austin won the competition, and the contest now has
entries from all over the country.
By 1992, the top eight salsa
manufacturers were Pace, Old El Paso, Frito-Lay, Chi-Chi's, La Victoria, Ortega,
Herdez, and Newman's Own. Pace owned 32.3 percent of the market, according to a
study by Information Resources, Inc., and published in The New York Times.
The market share figures change when different sources are consulted, but Pace
is always in the lead. Pace spent $10 million in advertising in 1992 to maintain
that lead, outspending Pet Foods' $5 million for the Old El Paso sauce lines.
That same year fifty new salsa
products were introduced in Texas alone, including new brands or additional
products by established brands. By 1993, competition from the smaller salsa
companies was so fierce that Pace, Old El Paso, and a total of six of the top
ten brands saw Texas sales decline three percent from the year before. During
the first seven months of 1993, according to New Product News, 147 new
salsa products were introduced, including Heinz's Salsa Style Ketchup, and this
number is only reported new products.
Also in 1992, Pace Foods pulled
off the unbelievable, coals-to-Newcastle coup of marketing their picante sauce
in Mexico! It all happened because the company shot a Spanish-language
commercial in Mexico City and brought along 350 jars of sauce as props. When the
shoot was over, Robert Burke, the marketing director of Pace, left the display
behind and told the grocer to keep the jars as a gift. Several weeks later, the
grocer called to say that he had sold every jar and wanted more. Such a
serendipitous event caused Pace to begin distribution in Mexico, which supports
the theory that a maturing Mexican population (in terms of prepared foods) is
creating a non-traditional market.
The big news in 1994 was the buy
out of two of the largest companies in the Fiery Foods Industry. The number one
salsa manufacturer, Pace Foods, was sold to Campbell Soup Company for an
astronomical $1.1 billion. The sales figure is approximately five times Pace's
1994 estimated sales of $220 million--an amazingly high sales multiple.
In even a larger deal, Pillsbury,
a division of the giant British food and beverage company, Grand Metropolitan
PLC, announced that it would purchase Pet Foods, maker of Old El Paso Mexican
foods. The sale price? A cool $2.6 billion. Terry Thompson, a spokesperson for
Pillsbury, called Old El Paso "one of the crown jewels" of brand names, the
market leader for all retail Mexican foods.
Together, Pace and Pet controlled
about half of the market for Mexican sauces. "The overall Mexican sauce and
foods categories are growing by leaps and bounds," said Kevin G. Lowery, a
Campbell spokesman. "They are among the fastest-growing categories in the entire
food business, both retail and food service. One reason for this is electronic
technology, which has spread the word about salsas and spicy foods to a new
audience.
Nelson Thall, president of the
Marshall McLuhan Center for Global Communications in Toronto, has a unique
explanation for the ever-increasing popularity of hot sauces and other fiery
foods: "Americans are becoming more 'tribal' in the their tastes," said Thall.
"And tribal Third World cultures embrace spicier foods, as opposed to the
traditional ketchup-like blandness preferred by Western cultures."