Sauce Piquante – Hot Sauce

Ananas + Habanero
Pineapple + Habanero

Nous avons créé cette sauce piquante pour accompagner notre repas poulet jerk + sauce rhum et ananas, et tofu jerk + sauce rhum et ananas. Par contre, notre marinade jerk a tendance à être assez épicée par elle-même, et nous n’avons pas senti que servir jerk (traditionnellement fait avec des scotch bonnets seulement) avec une sauce piquante à base d’habanero serait fidèle à la recette. Donc, nous avons choisi de garder cette sauce piquante pour la ligne Ladykillers. Cette sauce piquante épicée que les autres. Avec des moins de sucres naturels et les habanero, cette sauce piquante est plus prononcée – probablement notre plus épicée disponible.

Cette sauce est incroyable sur les tacos, le filet de poisson, la longe de porc et même les légumes. Parfait pour tous ceux qui peuvent prendre un niveau de chaleur plus élevé.

We initially created this hot sauce to pair with our jerk chicken + pineapple rum glaze meal, and jerk tofu + pineapple rum glaze meal. However, our jerk marinade tends to be quite spicy on its own, and we did not feel that serving jerk (traditionally made with scotch bonnets only) with a habanero based hot sauce would be true to the recipe, we chose to keep this sauce for the Ladykillers line. This hot sauce has more kick than our others. With less natural sugars and the bite from the habanero, this hot sauce is more pronounced – probably our spiciest available.

This sauce is amazing on tacos, fish fillet, pork loin and even veggies. Perfect for anyone that can take a higher level of heat with a little touch of sweet.

 

Notre sauce piquante Ananas + Habanero a été inspirée par la célèbre tueuse en série Jane Toppan

Jane Toppan est née Honora Kelley, au Massachusetts, en 1854 dans une famille d’immigrants irlandais. Elle grandit dans un orphelinat , puisque que son père était incapable de prendre soins de sa famille après la mort de sa femme, emporté par la turberculose. De plus, on raconte que cet homme était un ivrogne abusif et excentrique. Il aurait supposément cousu ses paupières après un épisode de folie.
À l’âge de 10 ans, Honora fut la servante sous contrat chez la famille Toppan. Elle s’attendait bien avec la fille de la famille, Elizabeth.
Les Toppan ont fait passer,Honora, pour une italienne ,dont les parents sont morts en mer, à cause des préjugés aux Irlandais. Elle pris leur nom de famille, même si elle ne fût pas adopter par eux. Avec le temps, elle changera son nom pour Jane Toppan.

Our Pineapple + Habanero hot sauce was inspired by notorious serial killer Jane Toppan

Jane Toppan was born Honora Kelley in 1854 to a family of Irish immigrants. Her mother died at a very young age of tuberculosis, and her father was an abusive and eccentric drunk. It is said that he lost his mind and sewed his eyelids shut. He failed to care for his children after his wife’s death, so he brought his daughters to an orphanage for impoverished girls. They never saw their father again; it was noted in documents that they were “rescued from a very miserable home.”
At the age of 10, Honora was placed as an indentured servant in the home of the Toppans. The Toppans passed her off as an Italian girl whose parents died at sea, due to the stigma associated with the Irish. Though she was never officially adopted by the Toppans’, she assumed their last name. Honora got on well with their daughter Elizabeth, and in time changed her name to Jane Toppan.

À 18 ans, Jane obtien son diplôme secondaire .Les Toppan l’a libère de son contrat et lui donne 50 $, mais elle reste comme servante. Lorsque que les parents d’ Elizabeth meurent ,elle repris la maison et a continue à traiter Jane comme une servante. Elizabeth épouse Oramel Brigham, qui emménage dans la maison des Toppan. Cela a poussé Jane à quitter la maison où elle avait vécu pendant 20 ans. Cependant, Elizabeth invitait souvent Jane à lui rendre visite et à rester avec elle, et Jane lui répondait parfois.

En 1885 Jane a commencé une formation pour être une infirmière à l’hôpital de Cambridge. Elle était bien-aimée et amicale, Son surnom était “Jolly Jane”. Cepandant, Jane avait un hobbie morbide. Elle aimait faire des expérimentations avec la morphine et l’atropine sur des patients, généralement âgés et malades. Elle modifiait les posologies prescrits pour voir le résultas sur leur système nerveux. Elle jonglait avec eux pour que ces patients entrent et sortent dans le coma. Ayant une santé fragilisée, ces patients finissaient par mourir. L’administration de l’hôpital commencait à s’inquiéter du comportement de Jane et son obsession pour les autopsies. Après quelque temps, elle fût congediée. Elle retourna à Cambridge, mais a été rapidement congédiée pour avoir administré des opiacés par insouciance.  Toppan commença alors une carrière d’infirmière privée et prospéra, malgré les plaintes de petits vols.

At 18, Jane graduated from Lowell High School. The Toppans freed Jane from her indenture and gave her $50, but she stayed on as a servant. When the Toppan’s died, Elizabeth took over the house and continued to treat Jane as a servant. Elizabeth married Oramel Brigham, who moved into the Toppan house. This caused Jane to move out of the house she’d lived in for twenty years. However, Elizabeth often invited Jane to come visit and stay with them, and Jane sometimes took her up on the invitation.
In 1885, Jane began training to be a nurse at Cambridge Hospital. She was well-liked and friendly, resulting in her nickname “Jolly Jane”.

Jane would choose patients, usually elderly and very sick, on whom she would experiment with morphine and atropine. She altered their prescribed dosages and charts to see what it did to their nervous systems, ultimately medicating them to drift in and out of consciousness and finally death. The hospital administration grew concerned over her obsession with autopsies, though did not know of her experiments on patients with medication at that time; Jane was recommended for the prestigious Massachusetts General Hospital in 1889. There, she claimed several more lives before being fired the following year. She returned to Cambridge, but was quickly dismissed for administering opiates recklessly. Toppan then began a career as a private nurse and flourished, despite complaints of petty theft.

Sa folie meurtrière a vraiment commencé en 1895 en tuant son propriétaire et sa femme. Plus tard, elle a expliqué qu’ils étaient devenus « faibles et difficiles » et qu’ils étaient « vieux et grincheux ». Ses collègues infirmières se souvenaient que Jane croyais qu’il ne servait à rien de garder les personnes âgées en vie.

En 1889, Mary McLear, 70 ans, est tombée malade lors d’une visite à Cambridge et son médecin a envoyé Jane Toppan, « l’une de mes meilleures infirmières », pour prendre soin d’elle. Jane a empoisonné Mary McLear.

Un mois plus tard, elle a tué un ami proche avec la strychnine afin qu’elle puisse prendre son poste de directrice de salle à manger à l’école théologique de St. John’s à Cambridge. Elle a obtenu le poste, mais il n’a pas duré. L’administration ne pouvait pas ignorer les plaintes envers incompétence et l’argent disparut.

En 1899, Jane cible sa propre sœur. Elizabeth se plaint de dépression et Jane l’invite au Cap. Un jour, elle emmena Elizabeth à la plage pour un pique-nique de bœuf salé , de tire et d’eau minérale mélangée à de la strychnine. « Je l’ai tenue dans mes bras et j’ai vu avec plaisir que sa vie se terminait », a dit Jane plus tard.

Her killing spree really began in 1895 upon killing her landlord and his wife. She later explained they had gotten “‘feeble and fussy”’ and “‘old and cranky”.”’ Her colleagues in nursing school remembered her saying there was no use keeping old people alive.
In 1889, 70-year-old Mary McLear fell ill on a visit to Cambridge. Her doctor sent Jane Toppan, “‘one of my best nurses,’” to care for her. Jane poisoned Mary McLear.
A month later, she killed a close friend with strychnine so she could take her job as dining hall matron at St. John’s Theological School in Cambridge. She got the job, but it didn’t last. The administration couldn’t ignore complaints of missing money and her incompetence.

In 1899, Jane targeted her own sister. Elizabeth complained of depression, and Jane invited her down to the Cape. One day she took Elizabeth to the beach for a picnic of cold corned beef, taffy and mineral water laced with strychnine. “I held her in my arms and watched with delight as she gasped her life out,” Jane later said.

Jane Toppan décide alors de s’insérer dans la maison du veuf d’Elizabeth, Oramel, parce qu’elle veut l’épouser. Après trois jour, elle a tué la femme de ménage. Elle reprend les tâches ménagères et essaie d’impressionner Oramel avec ses compétences en entretien ménager. Brigham a dit clairement qu’il ne voulait pas d’elle comme femme de ménage ou comme épouse.

Jane a décidé de gagner son amour en l’empoisonnant et en le soignant par la suite. Cela n’a pas fonctionné non plus, alors elle a menacé de dire qu’il l’avait mise enceinte. Enragé, Oramel a ordonné à Jane de sortir de sa maison. Elle a essayé de se suicider avec une overdose de morphine, mais a échoué.

Jane a ensuite loué un chalet de la famille Davis, mais elle n’avait pas payé le loyer. L’épouse d’Alden Davis, Mattie, s’est rendue à Cambridge pour recueillir son loyer, mais Jane l’a tuée avec un cocktail de morphine et d’atropine. La fille aînée de Davis, Annie, était tellement bouleversée qu’elle se tourna vers Jane pour obtenir du soulagement. L’infirmière Toppan l’aida en lui faisant des injections. Peu de temps après, Annie est décédée. Elle est demeurée infirmière de la famille Davis et a emménagé chez l’aîné Alden Davis pour s’occuper de lui. En quelques semaines, il a été tué, avec sa sœur et ses deux filles. Les survivants de la famille Davis ont commandé un rapport toxicologique sur la plus jeune fille. On a découvert qu’elle avait été empoisonnée. Jane a été arrêtée peu de temps après, et en 1902.Elle a admis 31 meurtres. Elle a été déclarée non coupable pour cause d’aliénation mentale et a été internée à vie à l’hôpital psychiatrique de Tauton.

Dans un article publié peu après son arrestation, il a été rapporté que Jane administrait une concoction de médicaments à ses patients, s’allongeait avec eux les tenait, et les caressait pendant qu’ils mourraient. Elle essayait de voir le fonctionnement intérieur de leurs âmes à travers leurs yeux dans leurs derniers moments. Pendant son interrogatoire, Toppan a admis qu’elle ressentait un frisson de nature sexuel en voyant les patients sur le point de mourir, revenir à la vie et finalement mourir à nouveau. Jane a admis qu’elle aspirait « à vouloir tué plus de personnes — des personnes sans défense — que n’importe quel autre homme ou femme ayant jamais vécu ».

Jane Toppan then decided to insert herself into the household of Elizabeth’s widower, Oramel, because she wanted to marry him. Within three days, she killed the housekeeper. She took over household chores and tried to impress Oramel with her housekeeping skills. Brigham made it clear he didn’t want her as a housekeeper or as a wife.

Jane decided to win his love by poisoning him and then nursing him back to health. That didn’t work either, so she threatened to claim he’d gotten her pregnant. Enraged, Oramel ordered Jane out of the house. She tried to commit suicide with an overdose of morphine, but failed.

Jane then rented a cottage from the Davis family, but she hadn’t kept up with the rent. Alden Davis’ wife Mattie went to Cambridge to collect, but Jane killed her with a cocktail of morphine and atropine. The Davis family’s elder daughter, Annie, was so distraught she turned to Toppan for relief. Nurse Toppan obliged by giving her some injections. Shortly thereafter, Annie died. Retained as the family nurse, she moved in with the elderly Alden Davis to take care of him. Within weeks he was killed, along with his sister and two daughters. The surviving members of the Davis family ordered a toxicology report on the youngest daughter. It found that she was poisoned. Jane was arrested shortly after, and by 1902 she had admitted to 31 murders. She was found not guilty by reason of insanity and was committed for life to the Tauton Insane Hospital.

In an article published shortly after her arrest, it was reported that Jane would administer a concoction of drugs to her patients, and lay with them, hold them, and fondle them as they died. She would attempt to see the inner workings of their souls through their eyes in their last moments. Toppan admitted during questioning that she derived a sexual thrill from patients being on the verge of death, coming back to life, and finally dying again. Jane admitted she aspired “to have killed more people — helpless people — than any other man or woman who ever lived.”

We initially created this hot sauce to pair with our jerk chicken + pineapple rum glaze meal, and jerk tofu + pineapple rum glaze meal. However, our jerk marinade tends to be quite spicy on its own, and we did not feel that serving jerk (traditionally made with scotch bonnets only) with a habanero based hot sauce would be true to the recipe, we chose to keep this sauce for the Ladykillers line. This hot sauce has more kick than our others. With less natural sugars and the bite from the habanero, this hot sauce is more pronounced – probably our spiciest available.

This sauce is amazing on tacos, fish fillet, pork loin and even veggies. Perfect for anyone that can take a higher level of heat with a little touch of sweet.

 

Our Pineapple + Habanero hot sauce was inspired by notorious serial killer Jane Toppan

Jane Toppan was born Honora Kelley in 1854 to a family of Irish immigrants. Her mother died at a very young age of tuberculosis, and her father was an abusive and eccentric drunk. It is said that he lost his mind and sew his eyelids shut. He failed to care for his children after his wife’s death, so brought his daughters to an orphanage for impoverished girls. They never saw their father again, and it was noted in documents that they were “rescued from a very miserable home.” 

At the age of 10 Honora was placed as an indentured servant in the home of the Toppans. The Toppans passed her off as an Italian girl whose parents died at sea, because of the stigma associated with the Irish. Though she was never officially adopted by the Toppans’, she assumed their last name. Honora got on well with their daughter Elizabeth, and in time changed her name to Jane Toppan.

At 18, Jane graduated from Lowell High School. The Toppans freed Jane from her indenture and gave her $50, but she stayed on as a servant. When the Toppan’s died, Elizabeth took over the house and continued to treat Jane as a servant. Elizabeth married Oramel Brigham, who moved into the Toppan house. This caused Jane to move out of the house she’d lived in for 20 years. However,  Elizabeth often invited Jane to come visit and stay with them and Jane sometimes took her up on the invitation.

In 1885 Jane began training to be a nurse at Cambridge Hospital. She was well-liked and friendly, resulting in her nickname “Jolly Jane”.

Jane would choose patients, usually elderly and very sick, on whom she would experiment with morphine and atropine. She altered their prescribed dosages and charts to see what it did to their nervous systems, ultimately medicating them to drift in and out of consciousness and finally death.  The hospital administration grew concerned over her obsession with autopsies, though did not know of her experiments on patients with medication at that time; Jane was recommended for the prestigious Massachusetts General Hospital in 1889. There, she claimed several more lives before being fired the following year. She returned to Cambridge but was quickly dismissed for administering opiates recklessly. Toppan then began a career as a private nurse and flourished, despite complaints of petty theft.

Her killing spree really began in 1895 by killing her landlord and his wife. She later explained they had gotten ‘feeble and fussy’ and ‘old and cranky.’ Her colleagues in nursing school remembered her saying there was no use keeping old people alive.

In 1889, 70-year-old Mary McLear fell ill on a visit to Cambridge. Her doctor sent Jane Toppan, ‘one of my best nurses,’ to care for her. Jane poisoned Mary McLear.

A month later she killed a close friend with strychnine so she could take her job as dining hall matron at St. John’s Theological School in Cambridge. She got the job, but it didn’t last. The administration couldn’t ignore complaints of her incompetence and missing money.

In 1899 Jane targeted her own sister. Elizabeth complained of depression, and Jane invited her down to the Cape. One day she took Elizabeth to the beach for a picnic of cold corned beef, taffy and mineral water laced with strychnine. “I held her in my arms and watched with delight as she gasped her life out,” Jane later said.

Jane Toppan then decided to insert herself into the household of Elizabeth’s widower, Oramel, because she wanted to marry him. With three days she killed the housekeeper. She took over household chores and tried to impress Oramel with her housekeeping skills. Brigham made it clear he didn’t want her as a housekeeper or as a wife.

Jane decided to win his love by poisoning him and then nursing him back to health. That didn’t work either, so she threatened to claim he’d gotten her pregnant. Enraged, Oramel ordered Jane out of the house. She tried to commit suicide with an overdose of morphine, but failed. 

Jane then rented a cottage from the Davis family, but she hadn’t kept up with the rent. Alden Davis’ wife Mattie went to Cambridge to collect, but Jane killed her with a cocktail of morphine and atropine. The elder Davis daughter, Annie, was so distraught she turned to Toppan for relief. Nurse Toppan obliged by giving her some injections. Shortly thereafter, Annie died.  Retained as the family nurse, she moved in with the elderly Alden Davis to take care of him. Within weeks he was killed, along with his sister and two daughters. The surviving members of the Davis family ordered a toxicology report on the youngest daughter. It found that she was poisoned. Jane was arrested shortly after, and by 1902 she admitted to 31 murders. She was found not guilty be reason of insanity and committed for life to Tauton Insane Hospital. 

In an article published shortly after her arrest, it was reported that Jane would administer a concoction of drugs to her patients, and lay with them, hold them, and fondle them as they died. She would attempt to see the inner workings of their souls through their eyes in their last moments. Toppan admitted during questioning that she derived a sexual thrill from patients being on the verge of death, coming back to life and finally dying again. Jane admitted she aspired “to have killed more people — helpless people — than any other man or woman who ever lived.”

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