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Posted on 10.20.06 by Administrator @ 8:25 am
By Kellie Applen So much so, the 16-year-old Concord High School senior dropped $25 for a bottle of Mad Dog 357 and brought it with her to school today. Little did Laura know, the fiery sauce would end up hurting two classmates and lead to the school suspending her and a 15-year-old friend, Stephanie Goins. “I thought it was ridiculous that I got suspended for possession of a deadly weapon and it was hot sauce,” Laura said. Principal Ronald Miller said the girls were suspended for the way they used the sauce, not because they had it. “If anything causes a disruption or harm to anyone, then it’s grounds for taking disciplinary action,” he said early this afternoon. But after talking to students and parents again, the school revoked the suspension. Still, the girls spent one day at home. Laura and Stephanie said they brought the sauce to school because several friends had boasted they could handle the heat, Laura said. Before their first class Thursday, a 16-year-old male friend tried to prove it by chugging the sauce, she said. Turns out, he couldn’t. The boy started breathing hard, his face turned red, and he got the shakes, Laura said. The school called paramedics, though he insisted he would be fine, Laura said. “Even the paramedic said there is nothing wrong. He said, ‘It’s just hot sauce,’” Laura said. The school called paramedics again when a supervisor realized another male student accidentally got hot sauce in his eye, she said. Stephanie and Laura went to class but were pulled out by a supervisor, brought to a vice principal’s office and slapped with a two-day suspension. “It was their own stupidity and we shouldn’t have gotten in trouble for it,” Stephanie said Neither girl was in trouble with their parents. And upon further reflection, school officials decided the girls may not have been at fault. Laura’s father, Vince Martin, said the school overreacted. “I think it’s stupid,” Martin said. “I mean it’s a food item, OK? I have never heard of anybody getting suspended for hot sauce. Knifes and guns, yes.” Though Martin appreciates his daughter’s love of spicy food, he doesn’t touch the stuff. “It just tears me up so I don’t eat it.” Product URL: http://www.hotsauceworld.com/357maddoghot.html Filed under: Hot Sauce News Comments: None |
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Posted on 01.03.06 by Administrator @ 7:41 am
Sudbury, MA (PRWEB) November 11, 2005 — Ashley Foods, maker of 357 Mad Dog Collector’s Edition hot sauce, “World’s hottest hot sauceâ€? responds to demands for a volcanic wing sauce with 357 Extreme Wing sauce, “World’s hottest wing sauceâ€?. Not for Lily-livered chickens! It possesses EXTREME HEAT from Hell but also EXTREME TASTE, an orgasm for your mouth that will wing you to Heaven, with dynamic Chipotle Chile peppers, smooooth butter flavour, mellow beer buds, aged red peppers and garlic. The explosive heat and fireball of flavour produce monster taste, real taste – not that vinegar-y bite in common wing sauces. The ingredients are fresh, natural and preservative-free. Pepper heat is measured in units called Scovilles that produce a range of heat sensation from pleasure to pain, depending upon the amount used in the product. 357 Extreme Wing Sauce uses 2,000,000 (yes, two million!) Scoville units of extract per bottle. However, the user can totally personalize this sauce for an awesome heat pleasure, either savage or tame. The wildest heat-freaks can blow the top of their heads off by blathering it on meats and wings (and slurping their fingers clean!), while pussies can wimp it down by adding it, per taste, to favorite sauces and marinades. Either way, everyone can indulge to their heart’s content, in this daring twist for savouries, appys and dips. Perfect for Holiday recipes and entertaining. Be sure you invite a fire fighter, or at least have a fire extinguisher handy…. 357 Extreme Wing Sauce is hand crafted in small batches – Ashley Foods is mad about EXTREME QUALITY. Orders for this sauce piled up even as the sauce was still in exacting development. A prominent Boston restaurateur describes it as “Wing-suckin’ deliciousâ€?, a gorgeous vermillion color, silky smooth in texture – the only wing sauce out there that provides this quality of heat along with this quality of flavor. It comes in a kickin’ bottle with a rubber chicken key chain – flash it proudly as your badge of courage! 357 Extreme Wing Sauce is a cool collectable for chili-heads, an unexpected hoot of a holiday gift for anyone, including yourself! Award-winning Ashley Foods also makes the popular MAD DOG BBQ sauces, MAD CAT Habanero, SPICY TERIYAKI, GREEN AMIGO, IDIOT BOYZ and others. 357 EXTREME WING SAUCE will soon be alighting in stores offering superior sauces, and available for internet ordering. www.ashleyfood.com. Suggested retail – $8.00 12 fl. oz. bottle. Filed under: Hot Sauce News Comments: None |
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Posted on 12.17.05 by Administrator @ 11:09 am
America is warming up this year with the largest desire for Hot and Spicy products. Filed under: Hot Sauce News Comments: None |
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Posted on 07.21.05 by Administrator @ 2:38 pm
Ex-Black Panthers want to sell hot sauce OAKLAND, Calif. –Former Black Panthers are hoping the phrase “Burn Baby Burn” will help their nonprofit organization market a new product — hot sauce. The Huey P. Newton Foundation, named for the co-founder of the 1960s militant group, is seeking to trademark the phrase that for many brings to mind the racially charged 1965 Watts Riots in Los Angeles that left more than 30 people dead, at least 1,000 wounded and hundreds of buildings in ashes. The new line of hot sauce, called “Burn Baby Burn: A Taste of the Sixties Revolutionary Hot Sauce,” is aimed at “anyone who wants to have an extra savory boost to their food,” executive director and original Black Panther David Hilliard said in an interview. “The hot sauce is another way to raise money and bring attention to the Huey Newton Foundation,” Hilliard said. “We’re trying to turn the tide of violence and educate young people through our work.” The foundation’s hot sauce plans were first reported by The Smoking Gun, a Web site that posts court documents, usually involving celebrities. The foundation also plans to produce its own salsa, as well as a clothing line called “Spirit of the Sixties.” Hilliard said the group hopes to start selling the spicy condiment later this year to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the 1966 founding of the Black Panther Party. Filed under: Hot Sauce News Comments: None |

