This is Highly Recommend, a column dedicated to our very opinionated editors’ favorite things to eat, drink, and buy.
It appeared on the office free table with no explanation. A bottle of sauce with a piece of red velveteen over the top, tied with gold elastic. “Georgia Peach & Vidalia Onion Hot Sauce” read the label, beside a storybook-esque illustration of a voluptuous red-headed lady sitting in a field of pink flowers. A blue ribbon denoted the years the sauce was deemed an “International Champion” and/or a “National Award Winner”: 1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001. How could I not be intrigued?
Upon further investigation (which is to say, posting a question on our office Slack channel), I learned that the bottle came from my colleague Alex Beggs, who had recently attended the 2019 Hot Sauce Expo. There, she saw a lot of braided beards and tasted 47 hot sauces in six hours. “I got that sauce from a man in a chicken hat,” she tells me, wheeling past my desk in her swivel chair. “It’s from Peppers.com.”
If you haven’t yet graced the fiery wonderland that is Peppers.com, let me fill you in. The homepage is dominated by a striking piece of stock imagery featuring a chile pepper in flames. The enormous online marketplace sells salsas, Bloody Mary mixes, chicken wing sauces, barbecue sauces, and of course, hot sauces. It’s the digital baby of the aforementioned chicken-hatted guy, Chip Hearn, who followed in his father Luther’s entrepreneurial footsteps by opening a series of ice cream shops in and around Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, in the 1970s.
There are thousands of sauces for sale, and apparently Chip has tried all of them, but only one is advertised on the website’s front page. And that is Georgia Peach & Vidalia Onion Hot Sauce, which Chip makes himself. “For all of you aficionados out there,” reads the product page, “this sauce is also available in a gallon-size bottle.”
So back to my desk, where the bottle—a regular old 5-ouncer from Beggs’ expo swag bag—sat gathering dust beside my pencil cup and collection of unopened stress-reducing vitamins. There it remained until a couple weeks later, when someone delivered a batch full of burgers and French fries to our office without any ketchup. Lo! Not someone to suffer a naked French fry, I reached for the sauce. And that is when my office life, as I knew it, changed forever.
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