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Rabu, 04 Juli 2018

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Sauce farming is a type of salad dressing made from several combinations of buttermilk, salt, garlic, onions, mustard, herbs (usually leek, parsley, and dill), and spices (usually black pepper, peppers, and ground mustard seeds), mixed into a sauce based on mayonnaise, or other oil emulsions. Sour cream and yogurt are sometimes used as additives or as substitutes for buttermilk and mayonnaise. Sauce farms have been the best-selling salad dressing in the United States since 1971, when it beats the Italian sauces. It is also popular in the US as a sauce and flavoring for chips and other foods.


Video Ranch dressing



Histori

In the early 1950s, Steve Henson developed what is now known as a livestock sauce while working as a pipe contractor for three years in the remote Alaskan bush. In 1954, he and his wife Gayle opened Hidden Valley Ranch, a dude farm at the former Sweetwater Ranch at San Marcos Pass in Santa Barbara County, California, where they serve it to customers. It became popular, and they started selling it in packages for customers to take home, both as a finished product and as a spice package mixed with mayonnaise and buttermilk. As demand grows, they combine Hidden Valley Ranch Food Products, Inc., and open a factory to produce in larger volumes, which they first distribute to supermarkets in the Southwest, and eventually, nationally. In October 1972, the Hidden Valley Ranch brand was bought by Clorox for $ 8 million.

Kraft Foods and General Foods responded with a dry spice package similar to the "farm style" label. As a result, they were both sued for trademark infringement by the Waples-Platter Company, Texas based Ranch Style Beans producer (now part of ConAgra Foods), although Waples-Platter refused to enter the salad dressing market itself. afraid that the tendency of such products to damage quickly would damage its brand. This case was tried before a federal judge Eldon Brooks Mahon in Fort Worth, Texas, in 1976. Judge Mahon decided to support the Waples-Platter in a long opinion describing the various "livestock products" and "farms" available, from which many were created to compete with Hidden Valley Ranch. Judge Mahon specifically noted that Hidden Valley Ranch and Waples-Platter did not disagree with each other (although he also noted that Hidden Valley Ranch simultaneously sued General Foods in a separate federal case in California). The only problem before the Texas federal district court was that Waples-Platter debated the right of other producers to compete with Hidden Valley Ranch under the label "farm style".

Meanwhile, Clorox re-formulated Hidden Valley Ranch sauce several times to make it more convenient for consumers. The first change is to insert the buttermilk flavoring in spices so that the addition of standard milk to buttermilk is required. In 1983, Clorox developed a more popular non-coolant bottle formulation. In 2002, Clorox's subsidiary Hidden Valley Ranch Manufacturing LLC produced a package of farms and bottled sauce at two large factories, in Reno, Nevada, and Wheeling, Illinois.

During the 1980s, farms became a light meal, starting with Cool Ranch Doritos in 1987, and Hidden Valley Ranch Wavy Lay's in 1994.

During the 1990s, the Hidden Valley had three variations of child-oriented ranch: pizza, nacho cheese, and taco flavor.

Maps Ranch dressing



Popularity

Farming sauce common in the United States as a sauce for broccoli, carrots and celery as well as sauces for chips and "bar food" such as fries and chicken wings. It is also a common sauce for fried foods such as fried mushrooms, fried zucchini, fried pickles, jalapeno poppers, onion rings, chicken fingers, and hushpuppies. In addition, ranch dressing is used on pizza, pickles, baked potatoes, scrubs, tacos, pretzels, and hamburgers.

Although popular in the United States and Canada, ranch dressing is mostly unknown in other parts of the world. In Germany, KÃÆ'¼hne produces products labeled as WÃÆ'¼rziges Ranch-Dressing (literally "spicy sauce"). It is based on a common recipe but contains additional tomatoes, red peppers, and red peppers. The color is not white but looks like a cocktail sauce.

Sauce farms are produced by many manufacturers, including Hidden Valley, Ken, Kraft, Litehouse, Marie, Newman Own, and Wish-Bone.

Homemade Ranch Dressing Is Easy to Make | Epicurious.com
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See also

  • List of dips

BLT Pasta Salad with Avocado Ranch Dressing | Episode 1041 - YouTube
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References


Homemade Ranch Dressing Recipe | Gluten-Free Homemaker
src: glutenfreehomemaker.com


External links

  • Historical Ranch Hidden Valley

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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