Supply chain and management woes: Huy Fong Foods’ sriracha shortage strikes again

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At a Vietnamese restaurant a year ago, Polly Mitchell-Guthrie reached for a bottle of sriracha on the table and was surprised when the usual slow pour came out quickly.

Mitchell-Guthrie, a supply chain expert, asked the waiter what happened to the usual bottle with the rooster on it, and soon a complex backstory for why the copycat sauce was on the table became clear.

In a LinkedIn post, Mitchell-Guthrie, vice president of industry outreach and thought leadership at Kinaxis, highlighted the urgency of climate change with the disappearance of the sauce from store shelves and restaurant tables.

“In a vicious cycle, supply chains are the biggest contributor of a company’s emissions (in most cases 80-95%) and will also suffer from the resulting disruptions climate change causes,” she wrote. “#sustainablesupplychains are no longer a nice-to-have but a must-have, just like sriracha in pho.”

On April 30, Huy Fong notified wholesalers that it would again halt sauce production until after Labor Day due to supply issues. In April 2020, Huy Fong had also announced its first halt of production, citing low stock issues. In April 2022, the company announced another halt that would not resume until after Labor Day. And now, the company finds itself in the same place again.  

The recent letter, obtained by Food Dive from Jungle Jim’s International Grocery, pointed to the chili supply being “too green to proceed with production.” It read in part: “After reevaluating our supply of chili, we have determined that it is too green to proceed with production as it is affecting the color of the product.” 

The New York Times reported that “Craig Underwood, a California farmer who grew red jalapeños for Huy Fong Foods for nearly three decades and is now a competing manufacturer, said the chiles were likely picked too late in the season.”

He explained: “The jalapeños start out green, then mature to a chocolate color and are picked when they turn red.”

“Nobody wants a puke-colored hot sauce, and other chili experts I’m reading are saying it will impact the flavor…taste matters,” Mitchell-Guthrie said.

But it isn’t the popular hot sauce’s first experience with this and some experts say it’s more complicated than just supply issues.

“Peppers are a pretty labor-intensive crop — it’s really important for growers to compete with, with our labor shortages and the increasing expense of labor,” Walker said. “We really need to invest in research and development to have new varieties and new techniques to grow peppers so we can continue to keep our pantries filled with hot sauce.”

Huy Fong Foods is the most well-known and major manufacturer in the U.S. sriracha market, with only three products — sriracha, sambal and chili garlic sauce.

Yet even at its size, the shortage demonstrates how Huy Fong failed to adequately diversify its sourcing partners,  David Ortega, associate professor of food, agriculture and resource economics at Michigan State University told Manufacturing Dive back in 2023.

“These are seasonal products; you can’t just switch suppliers from one day to the next,” Ortega said. While the core culprit may have been climate change, he said, the fact that other hot sauce suppliers didn’t experience the same shortage meant that there was more to this story.

Struggling to source jalapenos since 2020

Although production has picked up in recent months, another shortage may be on the horizon as farmers grin and bear severe drought in Mexico, where Huy Fong sources its red winter pepper jalapeños.

USA Today reported that the company has since purchased peppers from other growers in New Mexico, Mexico, and California, but struggled with the shortage. Also, public lawsuits have caused some farmers to avoid the company. Currently, the company uses pepper suppliers in Mexico, some reports say. 

Huy Fong did not respond to a request for comment from Food Dive.

“You need to have the Goldilocks right number of suppliers — you can’t have too few. You also can’t have too many,”  Mitchell-Guthrie added.

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