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Cheez Whiz is a brand of processed cheese sauce and spread produced by Kraft Foods.It was developed by a team led by food scientist Edwin Traisman (1915–2007). It was first sold in 1952, and, with some changes in formulation, continues to be in production today.
Cheese sauce is commonly used as a dip for various foods, such as chips and vegetables. [15] It is also used as an ingredient or topping for many various dishes and side dishes, such as sandwiches, roasted potatoes, casseroles, pasta dishes, egg, fish and meat dishes and in soups. [15] [16] Many dishes are prepared using cheese sauce: Almadroc [17]
In 2015, the company expanded its barbecue sauce category by offering new flavor options like it did with its nacho cheese sauce. The barbecue sauce line is gluten-free and the high-fructose corn syrup was removed. It introduced two hot new flavors: Mrs. Renfro's Chipotle BBQ Sauce and Mrs. Renfro's Ghost Pepper BBQ Sauce.
Products include canned baked beans in tomato sauce (popularized in the "beanz meanz Heinz" advertising campaign), spaghetti in a similar sauce, and canned soup, condensed soup, and "ready to eat" soups. [53] Heinz manufactures "Big Red" tomato sauce, and a number of flavored baked bean varieties, as well as canned meals.
Randolph's recipe had three ingredients: macaroni, cheese, and butter, layered together and baked in a hot oven. [16] The cookbook was the most influential cookbook of the 19th century, according to culinary historian Karen Hess. [17] Similar recipes for macaroni and cheese occur in the 1852 Hand-book of Useful Arts, and the 1861 Godey's Lady's ...
The sauce is based upon white sauce, which is known as one of the 'mother sauces', and cheddar cheese. It could be seen as an English equivalent of the French Mornay sauce [1] (itself a variant of Béchamel sauce traditionally mixed with half Gruyère and half Parmesan). The sauce is made by adding an amount of cheddar cheese to white sauce and ...
Ketchup or catsup (/ ˈ k ɛ tʃ ə p, ˈ k æ t s u p, ˈ k ɑː tʃ ə p /) is a table condiment with a sweet and sour flavor. "Ketchup" now typically refers to tomato ketchup, [1] although early recipes for different varieties of ketchup contained mushrooms, oysters, mussels, egg whites, grapes, or walnuts, among other ingredients.
Because glutamate is commonly found in food, primarily from protein sources, the FDA does not require foods and ingredients that contain glutamate as an inherent component to list it on the label. Examples include tomatoes, cheeses, meats, hydrolyzed protein products such as soy sauce, and autolyzed yeast extracts.