Product Reviewed:
Tony Legner's Cat-5 Food Polish
Company:
Tony Legner's Culinary Productions
Website:
www.tonylegner.com
TheHotPepper Member:
tlegner
Listed Ingredients:
Salt, dried peppers, & other spices.
Label/Packaging:
Small spice shaker, decent label.
Heat Index:
10
Tony Legner first offered this seasoning to his customers at his restaurant in Texas (Tony Legner's Culinary Productions), and by popular demand, it is now a retail product.
"Cat-5 Food Polish adds brilliance and luster to any dish!"
Cat-5, for a category 5 hurricane. Took me awhile, but I eventually saw the eye of the storm in the logo. I don't quite get the "food polish" angle, I mean butter adds luster, not a dry spice. Maybe it's so hot it makes the food sweat? It's definitely unique!
Tried it on many things. Most recently, I tried it on pizza. Great on pizza. No need for those red pepper flakes, here's a nice seasoning with habanero peppers (and I believe I taste cayenne).
The heat was real easy to control. Just a little sprinkle and it adds a great flavor with some serious heat. At first I was thinking the heat level was not extreme, so I did some spoon tasting (all the pizza was gone). I kept adding more to the spoon and realized this is pretty extreme stuff! Wow!! A 10 for sure (if you pile it on, which you probably won't do, but I ate a good amount on the spoon), but if you do a light dusting, you can keep it at a 7. I'm liking dry seasoning more and more after this. You can really control the heat. Plus, you're not adding vinegar like with a hot sauce. Vinegar can ruin so many things. I also really like that there are no overpowering spices, like oregano (if it's in there good job on keeping it subtle). What you get is salt, heat, and great pepper flavor.
A welcome addition to the spicy seasoning market. I will be using it more than my salt and pepper shakers for sure.
Tony Legner's Cat-5 Food Polish
Company:
Tony Legner's Culinary Productions
Website:
www.tonylegner.com
TheHotPepper Member:
tlegner
Listed Ingredients:
Salt, dried peppers, & other spices.
Label/Packaging:
Small spice shaker, decent label.
Heat Index:
10
Tony Legner first offered this seasoning to his customers at his restaurant in Texas (Tony Legner's Culinary Productions), and by popular demand, it is now a retail product.
"Cat-5 Food Polish adds brilliance and luster to any dish!"
Cat-5, for a category 5 hurricane. Took me awhile, but I eventually saw the eye of the storm in the logo. I don't quite get the "food polish" angle, I mean butter adds luster, not a dry spice. Maybe it's so hot it makes the food sweat? It's definitely unique!
Tried it on many things. Most recently, I tried it on pizza. Great on pizza. No need for those red pepper flakes, here's a nice seasoning with habanero peppers (and I believe I taste cayenne).
The heat was real easy to control. Just a little sprinkle and it adds a great flavor with some serious heat. At first I was thinking the heat level was not extreme, so I did some spoon tasting (all the pizza was gone). I kept adding more to the spoon and realized this is pretty extreme stuff! Wow!! A 10 for sure (if you pile it on, which you probably won't do, but I ate a good amount on the spoon), but if you do a light dusting, you can keep it at a 7. I'm liking dry seasoning more and more after this. You can really control the heat. Plus, you're not adding vinegar like with a hot sauce. Vinegar can ruin so many things. I also really like that there are no overpowering spices, like oregano (if it's in there good job on keeping it subtle). What you get is salt, heat, and great pepper flavor.
A welcome addition to the spicy seasoning market. I will be using it more than my salt and pepper shakers for sure.