Who's Art? [emoji23]Guatemalan Insanity Pepper said:
Guatemalan Insanity Pepper said:
Sounds ODD for peppers. I would chuckle at anyone using it especially on their produce sales.The Hot Pepper said:I hate that word on hot sauce! Blair's gourmet hot sauce. That would sound cheesy wouldn't it? In the world of niche sauces and superhots, it has no place. Sounds like some snooty shizz that sells on the same shelf as homemade jams made by some old lady named Edith.
Point taken; "gourmet" is pretty much useless as a marketing term, and its inclusion on a label is likely to make me extra skeptical. It's kinda like the term "premium." Only the shittiest beers are described as "premium lager" on their bottles and cans.Ashen said:Despite the dictionary definition , in actuality Gourmet is a fairly useless subjective marketing description (ie Hand Crafted, artisan or artisanal), that offers no real objective information.Â
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The coffee beans I buy at the roaster near my house are Fairtrade, Ecocert Organic, those things mean more than just saying Gourmet.Â
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Morons are paying crazy amounts of money for Kopi Luwak marketed as the most expensive gourmet coffee. .Â
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 Most don't know that the supply now comes almost exclusively from caged Civets that are force fed coffee beans .Â
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The civets don't get to pick the best coffee cherries, don't eat the full range of their diet.
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Essentially animal cruelty for the sake of giving some nob the perceived experience of the Ultimate Gourmet coffee.Â
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Now I must go , this and the superhots and coffee I had with breakfast has given me a need to use my Gourmet ,Hand Crafted (l like to fold) costco TP.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kopi_Luwak#Animal_welfare
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ÂBicycle808 said:Point taken; "gourmet" is pretty much useless as a marketing term, and its inclusion on a label is likely to make me extra skeptical. It's kinda like the term "premium." Only the shittiest beers are described as "premium lager" on their bottles and cans.
And yeah, that's because it doesn't really mean anything. There are no standards or certifications behind subjective terms like "gourmet"...or, "premium," for that matter. It's just an adjective. I wouldn't use it to make any purchase decisions... But I'm completely comfortable using it in discussions with friends, family, and trusted thp members. We know what it means when it's used casually to describe a product or experience.
All that being said, i wouldn't be at anyone using the term "gourmet" to describe pretty much any fresh homegrown chile, or even really any commercially grown pepper beyond what one can typically find at most groceries. I probably wouldn't use that word myself, but i wouldn't call foul, neither.
I give peppers to some local restaurants around me. I might blush a little if ever they referred to my stuff's as "gourmet," but that might be a step up from what they describe'm as nice, which is often something like "really hot peppers that Fat Rob gave us."
That's a caveat, it works great at farmers markets for foods.That's the point tho. Marketing, and the perceived value, that you are getting something finer.salsalady said:I used to make Texas Creek PREMIUM Salsa, now I just make "really freaking good, locally hand crafted, all natural, gourmet Texas Creek Salsa" It's kind hard to fit it all on the label, but I have a good graphics person.Â
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ÂCaptain Caliente said:You are right. People need to look beyond the heat found in this peppers and realize that these are "gourmet".
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I like what you are saying here. It is definitely about perception. If you go to a Mexican restaurant and ask for hot peppers to be sauteed with your fajita fixens the chances of getting a "Premium" pepper are slim to none. You'll get Jalepenos. You might get an habanero salsa. Don't get me wrong. I love all peppers and they love me too. But a Scorpion or 7pot sauteed with your onions for fajitas - and the whole dish is elevated. You are right. People need to look beyond the heat found in this peppers and realize that these are "gourmet". They should be seen as such and they should be consumed as such. I appreciate you guys letting me rant about this. It is a passion.
you do know i'm kidding.....right?The Hot Pepper said:That's a caveat, it works great at farmers markets for foods.That's the point tho. Marketing, and the perceived value, that you are getting something finer.
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NOT peppers!
Âsalsalady said:you do know i'm kidding.....right?
 I was joking about having all this on the label, trying to catch all the buzz words. PS- you were the one who commented PREMIUM sounded like gasoline, so I took it off the label several years ago.The Hot Pepper said:Â
No because I know you sell locally at markets and may use the word, for some reason it seems to fit with some of the jam, jelly, local crowd where gourds are spilling off old broken wagons.