Seasoned salt

Table salt blended with herbs and spices From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Seasoned salt

Seasoned salt is a blend of table salt, herbs, spices, other flavourings,[1] and sometimes monosodium glutamate (MSG).[2] It is sold in supermarkets and is commonly used in fish and chip shops and other take-away food shops. Seasoned salt is often the standard seasoning on foods such as chicken, French fries, deep-fried seafood and potatoes.[3]

Thumb
Typical seasoned salt

Australia

Chicken salt

Chicken salt was originally developed in the 1970s by Peter Brinkworth in Gawler, South Australia to season chicken for rotisseries. This recipe was purchased by Mitani Group in 1979, and is now commonly used on chips (french fries) throughout Australia.[4][5][6]

The first recipe for chicken salt consisted of salt, onion powder, garlic powder, celery salt, paprika, chicken bouillon and monosodium glutamate (MSG), along with some unspecified herbs and spices.[5] There are versions of chicken salt that use chicken flavouring as well as vegan versions.[7]

United Kingdom

American chip spice

Invented in the 1970s in Hull and claimed to have been inspired by seasoned salt used in American diners, "chip spice" was introduced into the United Kingdom by Rod and Brenda Wilson; the recipe is paprika and salt-based.[8] A chilli-based variant is also available. The brand American Chip Spice is now owned by Wilson's Seasonings.[9]

United States

Types

Lawry's, the oldest commonly used "seasoned salt" in the US, was originally developed for seasoning steaks in the 1930s.[10][11]

Thumb
Lawry's, the most common brand of seasoned salt in the US

Morton Season-All is the #2 seasoned salt in the US by market share.[12]

Cajun and Creole seasoning. In Louisiana and the surrounding states, many companies make Cajun/Creole seasonings. It is a spicy blend of onion powder, garlic powder, paprika, oregano or thyme, salt, pepper, and chili powder. Brands include Tony Chachere's, Zatarain's and Paul Prudhomme.[13]

Old Bay is a celery salt-based seasoned salt commonly used on seafood.[14]

Market

The seasoned salt industry in the United States sells $100 million in seasoned salt annually. According to the US Federal Trade Commission, two brands make up 80% of the market.[15]

The combined marketshare of Lawry's seasoned salt and Season-All was of sufficient concern that the FTC required McCormick, then-owner of the Season-All brand, to sell it to Morton as a condition of McCormick purchasing Lawry's in 2008.[16]

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.