Wikipedia says jalapeño are in the 3500-8000 range* and serrano are 10,000-23,000. But my mistake, I scanned wrong and put jalapeño in the Sriracha range, 1000-2500.
And now that I look, is Tabasco sauce really that much hotter than Sriracha? I don’t see it, but I also put less Tabasco on (mostly because you can’t pour it and I get lazy).
*which doesn’t necessarily mean that’s their range, just the cohort they’re put into.
Yeah, I remember Sriracha being way hotter 7 or 8 years ago, but I just chalked it up to my increased tolerance. I make some Chinese chili sauce out of super hot Serrano peppers now, and it’s only moderately hotter than the store bought. I probably wouldn’t even bother if I didn’t have such an excess of peppers to deal with. Those guys make an excellent product.
I wonder if someone or some company has made a fortune from the explosive popularity of Sriracha. It seemed to appear on the heels of all the Pho restaurants that pop up everywhere.
Drinking the broth from a soup with a healthy dose of sriracha is amazing. It burns so evenly all the way down, I feel like it could cure a chest cold.
It does wonders for pizza too – especially crappy pizza.
It tastes just fine, not great but good enough. I do like that it isn’t hot just for heat’s sake, it actually has flavor. That said…
<Applies SPF-1000 sunscreen to protect from burns>
It is now the most overused, overexposed condiment ever created. It annoys me to no-end to see chef’s in restaurants (and food trucks… especially food trucks!) trying to be soooo edgy due to the pop-culture trend of Sriracha that they put it into damn near everything. I cannot help but dislike it purely based upon the hipster popularity factor alone.
I second the srimayo combination. A club sandwich made with srimayo is delicious, especially if you add a bit of cilantro and basil to the sandwich (I suggested calling this a Banh Mi Club awhile ago and got universal derision for the idea, but whatever dudes, it’s awesome).
I use it on just about everything previously mentioned, but one other thing I’ll add:
Pepper steak. My wife makes a great pepper steak dish, and we use Sriracha for an added kick that goes very well with the Asian/garlic flavor profile of the dish.
Squirt a bit into the rice on your plate before adding the pepper steak, broth and veggies. It’s perfect.
Also - the Subway Sriracha chicken melt is quite good.
I forgot to try it on pizza last night, so I had another slice and did. Better than Tabasco or pepper flakes, I think. And we have another Domino’s deep dish medium pizza in the fridge.
There’s a Korean-run teriyaki/sushi place around the corner from the office. If I don’t get teriyaki and tempura, I get bibimbap. (Sadly, they changed their menu so you no longer get the option of ‘with fry an egg’. Now it’s ‘Add fried egg’.) They cover the top of the bibimbap with Sriracha sauce. It’s just right.
Think anybody ever said the same about ketchup? It’s too mainstream to be hipster-bait for much longer anyhow. I really that it seems to be on its way to Heinz Ketchup-level ubiquitousness. That speaks well of the American palate and/or more melting of the melting pot.
Something like “suh-ROTCH-uh” in English. You can hear both Thai and English pronunciations here. In Thai, it sounds more like “SEE ROSH HAH” with about equal accents, but you can judge for yourself in that link.
There are two Thai pronunciations. The second one sounds like ‘sree-rah-chah’, with an ‘r’ in the first syllable, which is how I pronounce it; only I emphasise the second syllable: ‘sree-RAH-chah’.