Huy Fong Foods

Huy Fong Foods, Inc.
滙豐食品公司
Private
Industry Hot sauce
Founded 1980 in Los Angeles
Founder David Tran
Headquarters Irwindale, CA, USA
Key people
David Tran
founder
William Tran
President
Yassie Tran Holliday
Vice President
Products Asian-style hot sauce
Owner Tran family
Number of employees
200 (2011)
Website www.huyfong.com
Huy Fong Foods
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese 滙豐食品公司
Simplified Chinese 汇丰食品公司
Vietnamese name
Vietnamese alphabet Công ty Thực phẩm Hối Phong

Huy Fong Foods is a hot sauce company based in Irwindale, California.[1] Beginning in 1980 on Spring Street in Los Angeles's Chinatown, it has grown to become one of the leaders in the Asian hot sauce market, especially Sriracha sauce.

Name

The company is named for a Taiwanese freighter, the "Huey Fong", that carried the founder David Tran and 3,317 other refugees out of Vietnam in December 1978.[2] The rooster logo comes from the fact that Tran was born in the Year of the Rooster on the Vietnamese zodiac.[2][3][4]

Founder

The sauce was developed by the company's founder, David Tran (born 1945), an ethnic Vietnamese businessman and former Major in the army of South Vietnam,[5] who fled the country in 1978 and arrived in the United States (first in Boston, then in Los Angeles) in the spring of 1980 as a part of the migration of the Vietnamese boat people following the Vietnam War.[4]

Huy Fong Foods is a family business, staffed by eight members of the family. David Tran's son, William Tran (born c. 1976), is the company's president; his daughter Yassie Tran-Holliday is vice-president.[2] The company has never advertised its products, relying instead on word of mouth.

Products

The company's most popular product is its sriracha sauce. It was originally made with Serrano peppers and is now made with red Jalapeño peppers, reducing the overall pungency. It is currently Huy Fong Foods' best-known and best-selling item, easily recognized by its bright red color and its packaging: a clear plastic bottle with a green cap, text in five languages (Vietnamese, English, Chinese, French and Spanish) and the rooster logo. One nickname for the product is "hipster ketchup".[6]

Huy Fong also makes sambal oelek and chili garlic sauces.[7]

History

By 1987, Huy Fong Foods relocated to a 68,000-square-foot (6,300 m2) building in Rosemead, California that once housed toymaker Wham-O.[6] The company purchases chilis grown in Ventura, Los Angeles, and Kern Counties. Most of each year's chili mash is produced in just two months, during the autumn harvest. The sauces are produced on machinery that has been specially modified by Tran, who taught himself machining and welding skills. In 2001, the company was estimated to have sold 6,000 tons of chili products for approximately US$12 million.

Huy Fong Foods' chili sauces are made from red jalapeño chili peppers and contain no artificial ingredients. The company formerly used serrano chilis but found them difficult to harvest. All five sauces are manufactured in Rosemead, California. The company has warned customers about counterfeit versions of its sauces.[8]

In December 2009, Bon Appétit magazine named its Sriracha sauce Ingredient of the Year for 2010.[9] In 2010 the company produced 20 million bottles of sauce in a year.[10] As of 2012 it had grown to sales of more than US$60 million a year.[2]

New factory and community relations issues

Huy Fong Foods Headquarters, Irwindale, California

In 2010, the company opened a factory in Irwindale, California. It is 23 acres, with 26,000 square feet (2,400 m2) of office space, 150,000 square feet (14,000 m2) of production space, and 480,000 square feet (45,000 m2) of warehouse.[10] The odor of chilis that emanates from the new Irwindale factory upset the community's residents and the City of Irwindale filed a lawsuit against Huy Fong Foods in October 2013, claiming that the odor was a public nuisance.[11] Initially, a Los Angeles Superior Court judge refused the city's bid to shut down the factory[12] but a Los Angeles County Superior Court judge ordered the factory to essentially shut down on Nov. 27, 2013, prohibiting all activities that could cause odors.[13] On May 29, 2014, it was announced that Irwindale had dropped the lawsuit against Huy Fong Foods.[14]

References

  1. Contact Us, Huy Fong Foods, retrieved February 26, 2010.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Shyong, Frank (2013-04-12). "Sriracha hot sauce purveyor turns up the heat – David Tran introduced Sriracha to the U.S. in the 1980s, and it quickly caught on. His company sells more than $60 million of it a year.". LA Times. Retrieved 2013-04-30.
  3. Clemens, Randy (2011). The Sriracha Cookbook: 50 "Rooster Sauce" Recipes that Pack a Punch. Random House. p. 10.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Edge, John T. (2009-05-19). "A Chili Sauce to Crow About". New York Times. Retrieved 2013-04-30.
  5. http://articles.latimes.com/2013/apr/12/business/la-fi-himi-tran-20130414
  6. 6.0 6.1 http://www.forbes.com/sites/andrewbender/2014/09/24/once-secretive-sriracha-factory-becomes-californias-hottest-tourist-attraction/
  7. "Huy Fong Foods - Products". Retrieved 12 April 2014.
  8. To our valued customers, Huy Fong.
  9. "Best Foods of the Year". Conscious cook (World wide Web log). Bon Appétit. Dec 2009. Retrieved 2011-12-03.
  10. 10.0 10.1 "Huy Fong Foods is moving to Irwindale". The Scene. Los Angeles: NBC.
  11. Rogers, John (October 30, 2013). "City: Odor from Sriracha chili plant a nuisance". Associated Press.
  12. "Sriracha lawsuit: Judge denies Calif. city's bid to close hot sauce plant", News (CBS).
  13. Shyong, Frank (27 November 2013). "Effect on Sriracha supply unclear after partial shutdown ordered". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 27 November 2013.
  14. Shyong, Frank (May 29, 2014). "Sriracha truce brokered with help of Gov. Jerry Brown's office". LA Times.

External links