My last 16oz of sauce was slightly over 130grams of peppers and 25 grams of carrot. So it is actually 2nd on the list with onion coming in 3rd. Pretty hard to taste any carrot in it. The carrot is more for texture and a little sweetness.
spicefreak said:Which is why the third option exists:
Peppers 52% (Ghost Pepper 38%, Scorpion Peppers 37%, Reaper Peppers 25%), Vinegar 25%, Carrots 23%.
Personally, though, I tend to prefer a sauce that showcases a single pepper to one made with a blend.
Scorch Garden said:
I did read it, and i get it.
Listing % of ingredients is not typical of US based companies. I normally see that with imports or companies that originated in countries across the pond. A lot of Indian products list the ingredients by % and rather than saying 'calories' they use the term 'energy'.
I do see the marketing angle of splitting hairs to single out each pepper used, but as far as the FDA is concerned, a pepper is a pepper and can be lumped together as they all have equivalent nutritional values. Same with verbiage such as "natural flavors" and "spices". You can list out what those spices are, but the FDA is only concerned with nutritional equivalencies of like ingredients.
That and the FDA does not require label approval prior to going to market. It has the authority to regulate what goes on the label and enforce the regulations, but you don't have to submit to them prior to putting it on your package. Ive seen hot sauces out there with a sodium of 20mg, per tsp, but salt is not listed as an ingredient. More than likely, no one at the FDA will ever see it.
Ive seen hot sauces out there with a sodium of 20mg, per tsp, but salt is not listed as an ingredient.
Scorch Garden said:
What is your favorite pepper?
The Hot Pepper said:
NO you missed the point again. Take the percentages out, they are just there for visual aid. Point being carrots could be listed second or last depending on how listed, both FDA approved. So don't always discount a sauce based on the ordering. The FDA allows a lot of freedom, including "Spices" etc.
bob65 said:Is this the salt dude with a different login?
No, but the phrase "You get what you pay for." often rings true. Sadly that means cheaper yet good things get overlooked sometimes and things that could be a lot cheaper will carry a bigger price so it can be taken seriously.Edmick said:Oh and that bottle on the left was only $5 out the door and it's pretty good. So price is not always an indication of quality either.
Edmick said:Case in point.
EDIT: I also think there may be some proprietary concerns with some of the larger companies listing exact ingredients.