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Mayonnaise (/ ˌ m eɪ ə ˈ n eɪ z /), [1] colloquially referred to as "mayo" (/ ˈ m eɪ oʊ /), [2] is a thick, cold, and creamy sauce with a rich and tangy taste that is commonly used on sandwiches, hamburgers, composed salads, and French fries.
Toichiro Nakashima in 1967. Shokuhin Kogyo Co. Ltd. 食品工業株式会社 was founded in Nakano, Tokyo in 1919 by Toichiro Nakashima. [2] He had previously worked in the United States for three years as an intern for the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce, where he first encountered mayonnaise and the Kewpie doll that became his emblem. [3]
In 1903, Richard Hellmann emigrated from Vetschau, Germany, to New York City, where in August 1904 he married Margaret Vossberg, whose parents owned a delicatessen. [1] In mid-1905 he opened his own delicatessen at 490 Columbus Avenue, where he developed his first ready-made mayonnaise, dished-out in small amounts to customers.
While Hellmann's Mayonnaise thrived on the U.S. East Coast, selling $15 million a year by 1927 with $1 million in profits, the California company Postum Foods (later Best Foods) introduced their own mayonnaise, Best Foods Mayonnaise, which became popular on the West Coast, and was operating a major plant in San Francisco. In August 1927 Postum ...
In Argentina and Uruguay, a similar condiment known as salsa golf (golf sauce) is a popular dressing for fries, burgers, steak sandwiches, and seafood salads. According to tradition, the sauce was invented by Luis Federico Leloir, a Nobel laureate and restaurant patron, at a golf club in Mar del Plata, Argentina, during the mid-1920s.
Most editors praised this mayo for a nice balance of creaminess and tanginess. One gave it the complement that it already had the balanced salt, fat, and acid of a perfect aoili. "Perfect for ...
Duke's Mayonnaise is a condiment created by Eugenia Duke [2] in Greenville, South Carolina, in 1917. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] Duke's Mayonnaise is the third-largest mayonnaise brand in the United States (behind Hellmann's and Kraft ), however its popularity was at first largely limited to the South .
Mayonnaise, in the chapter on cold sauces, was described as a mother sauce for cold sauces, and compared to Espagnole and Velouté. [ 50 ] The 1907 English edition of Le guide culinaire , A Guide to Modern Cookery , listed fewer "basic sauces", including Hollandaise alongside espagnole, "half glaze" (demi glace), velouté, allemande, béchamel ...