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Post by deepfriednew101 on May 16, 2022 15:52:00 GMT 1
Tone's Chili In General I found Tone's Chili Powder was a MOST ROBUST AROMA over many other Chili powders and in using it verses MANY OTHER chili powders the Aroma was almost immediate in cooking and MUCH MORE AROMATIC then other's NOT just my view but the 100's of cooks who have been on our line's always say it has more aroma in use.
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Post by deepfriednew101 on May 16, 2022 15:54:31 GMT 1
Durkee's is also a very close second in the chili race.
Photo's are ONLY Photo's as reference We use a combination of Hot and Regular Chili Powder.
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Post by Chickenman on May 17, 2022 2:26:03 GMT 1
Same as before, just with tarragon and mustard added. Literal interpretation: Ingredients: 1. Pepper (white and black) 2. Red pepper (cayenne) 3. Garlic powder 4. Coriander 5. Ginger 6. Nutmeg 7. Allspice 8. Aniseed 9. Sage 10. Oregano 11. Savory (summer and winter) 12. Cardamom 13. Tarragon 14. mustard 15. Breakthrough chili pepper ^random order. Except there is no aniseed and savory. I have officially ruled out the use of fennel,aniseed, star anise, and savory. Tarragon delivers that anise flavour beautifully, so there is no need for aniseed etc. It is quite amazing that a single ingredient like tarragon is behaving like two ingredients in one, it is acting like a spice as if it were star anise and acting like a herb aswell.
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Post by Chickenman on May 17, 2022 2:31:41 GMT 1
The more i come closer and closer to cracking the Colonels recipe i can see how sophisticated it really is. The man didn't just slap a bunch of random ingredients together and got lucky, he spent alot of time studying each individual ingredient to get an understanding of how it will act in his recipe etc.
I'm also starting to believe that cardamom was the 11th ingredient.
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maceme
Kitchen Assistent
Posts: 220
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Post by maceme on May 17, 2022 5:10:24 GMT 1
The more i come closer and closer to cracking the Colonels recipe i can see how sophisticated it really is. The man didn't just slap a bunch of random ingredients together and got lucky, he spent alot of time studying each individual ingredient to get an understanding of how it will act in his recipe etc. I'm also starting to believe that cardamom was the 11th ingredient. Yes, he certainly worked hard on it, and in several locations. I’m curious, why do you say 11th, and not earlier and something else later? Are you among those who have a firm opinion about counting white and black pepper as zero, one, or two when counting to 11? There seem to be good reasons for each number, and I certainly don’t know. KFC themselves when communicating with the Settles seemed to indicate something like 15 total, if I recall the inference they made correctly. Some would add MSG, WP, BP, garlic, to the 11.
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Post by Chickenman on May 17, 2022 5:27:38 GMT 1
The more i come closer and closer to cracking the Colonels recipe i can see how sophisticated it really is. The man didn't just slap a bunch of random ingredients together and got lucky, he spent alot of time studying each individual ingredient to get an understanding of how it will act in his recipe etc. I'm also starting to believe that cardamom was the 11th ingredient. Yes, he certainly worked hard on it, and in several locations. I’m curious, why do you say 11th, and not earlier and something else later? Are you among those who have a firm opinion about counting white and black pepper as zero, one, or two when counting to 11? There seem to be good reasons for each number, and I certainly don’t know. KFC themselves when communicating with the Settles seemed to indicate something like 15 total, if I recall the inference they made correctly. Some would add MSG, WP, BP, garlic, to the 11. I strongly believe he counted the white and black pepper as a single ingredient. The man was very intelligent. I do not see him counting MSG as an ingredient in a recipe called "11 herbs and spices" MSG is not a spice. I don't know much about the settle's recipe, from what i read on the old forum someone mentioned that the settles were selling that recipe and that they bought it. I'm very curious to see what those ingredients are in the settles recipe to see how it matches up with mine. But i haven't been able to find anything about it.
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maceme
Kitchen Assistent
Posts: 220
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Post by maceme on May 17, 2022 6:03:54 GMT 1
Yes, he certainly worked hard on it, and in several locations. I’m curious, why do you say 11th, and not earlier and something else later? Are you among those who have a firm opinion about counting white and black pepper as zero, one, or two when counting to 11? There seem to be good reasons for each number, and I certainly don’t know. KFC themselves when communicating with the Settles seemed to indicate something like 15 total, if I recall the inference they made correctly. Some would add MSG, WP, BP, garlic, to the 11. I strongly believe he counted the white and black pepper as a single ingredient. The man was very intelligent. I do not see him counting MSG as an ingredient in a recipe called "11 herbs and spices" MSG is not a spice. I don't know much about the settle's recipe, from what i read on the old forum someone mentioned that the settles were selling that recipe and that they bought it. I'm very curious to see what those ingredients are in the settles recipe to see how it matches up with mine. But i haven't been able to find anything about it. It is difficult to put a date on counting to 11. It wasn’t part of any of the original trademark, patent, or business paperwork. It doesn’t show up in the early advertising. It seems to be a marketing invention that may or may not have a basis in reality. The words seasonings and elements were used at times, as was the term vegetable, and those gradually lost favor. I personally treat it as a minimum, and let taste be the guide.
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Post by Chickenman on May 17, 2022 7:22:32 GMT 1
I strongly believe he counted the white and black pepper as a single ingredient. The man was very intelligent. I do not see him counting MSG as an ingredient in a recipe called "11 herbs and spices" MSG is not a spice. I don't know much about the settle's recipe, from what i read on the old forum someone mentioned that the settles were selling that recipe and that they bought it. I'm very curious to see what those ingredients are in the settles recipe to see how it matches up with mine. But i haven't been able to find anything about it. It is difficult to put a date on counting to 11. It wasn’t part of any of the original trademark, patent, or business paperwork. It doesn’t show up in the early advertising. It seems to be a marketing invention that may or may not have a basis in reality. The words seasonings and elements were used at times, as was the term vegetable, and those gradually lost favor. I personally treat it as a minimum, and let taste be the guide. While it's possible it could be more than 11, I still believe that it's true it was actually "11 herbs and spices". I honestly feel like i am on the verge of cracking the recipe, it is only a matter of time until the remaining pieces of the puzzle fall into place for me. I'd say tarragon is the biggest discovery i have made so far, i can't believe i overlooked that herb so many times. Right now i am looking into a very unique chilli pepper.
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Post by Chickenman on May 17, 2022 8:03:03 GMT 1
Kfc follows 5 spice girls and 6 guys named herb
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Post by Silver on May 17, 2022 11:02:59 GMT 1
I'd say tarragon is the biggest discovery i have made so far, i can't believe i overlooked that herb so many times. Glad I could help in this regard, plus in the bonus regard that Tarragon introduces licorice. A tossed bone or two is the least I can ask.
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