I started my morning chasing an early report from a source that Texas Pete pepper sauce -- the clear bottle packed with little green/yellow peppers and filled with vinegar, not the brick-red hot sauce -- had been discontinued. Two people who contacted me had trouble finding it at a local supermarket, found a short supply at a second supermarket and then saw two online sources that appeared to list it as "discontinued by manufacturer."
Even though New Year's is over and we all have eaten our collards, dosed with plenty of pepper vinegar, I knew news like that would shake country cafes to the core. Those bottles stuffed with peppers are as common at meat-and-threes as bottles of Sriracha at Asian restaurants.
Ann Garner Riddle, president of T.W. Garner of Winston-Salem, the maker of Texas Pete, was quick to return my call and said she was flummoxed by the rumors. She quickly assured me that they're still making the product.
Now, that isn't to say that a particular store may not be carrying the product, she said. If you find that's the case, you can ask the manager to get it. Never hurts to make your wishes known.
Friday, January 11, 2013
Rumor patrol: Texas Pete pepper sauce is alive and kicking
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6 comments:
I wonder how hot these are .
I don't think you'd call it molten hot, LOWAMM. It's more about the vinegariness with some heat. For a lot of us, that combination is essential on greens.
We mostly only get tabasco hot sauce where I am. Tabasco sauce sucks. I love Texas Pete. That should be the standard everywhere.
So Texas Pete is made in North Carolina? Really?
Yep, it's made by the TW Garner Company in Winston-Salem. Still family-owned. They originally called it Mexican Joe, but they wanted a more patriotic name. One of the family sons was nicknamed Pete, so they came up with the name Texas Pete. And the rest is history.
Garner also makes Green Mountain Gringo salsa: absolutely wonderfully fresh tasting and chunky. It's the preferred salsa around our house, and who would have thought it's a local product?
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