sot sri racha (ซอสศรีราชา)
Thai. ‘Sri Racha sauce’. Name of
a hot sauce, dark orange
to red in colour,
and made from a paste of sweet
chili
peppers, vinegar,
garlic,
sugar and salt.
It is named after the seaside town and
amphur
of
Sri Racha (fig.) in
Chonburi
Province, where it was first produced, allegedly
in the
1930s by a local housewife named Ms. Thanom Thimkrajahng-Chakkaphaak
(นางถนอม
ทิมกระจ่าง-จักกะพาก).
The sauce, which is described by Thais as more viscous, more sweet
and more sour than other Thai sauces, is
in general
used
as a dipping sauce, especially
with seafood dishes and
typically
with
omelets,
such as with a dish
called
khai yad sai (fig.).
In
Vietnam, where the sauce is known as tuong ot sri racha (tương ớt
sriracha), it is used as a dipping sauce for fried
spring rolls
(fig.)
called cha gio (chả
giò) in
Vietnamese and
popiya
thod (เปาะเปี๊ยะทอด) in Thai.
It is sold in ketchup-like bottles and is also referred to as sot
phrik sri racha (ซอสพริกศรีราชา) and
nahm phrik
sri racha (น้ำพริกศรีราชา). Most brands feature one or more red
chilies on their label, referring both to the sauce's main
ingredient and to its pungent taste. In English, it may be referred
to as Sri Racha chili sauce.
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