The Prepared Horseradish Brand You Should Keep Out Of Your Shopping Cart - Tasting Table
Briefly

The Prepared Horseradish Brand You Should Keep Out Of Your Shopping Cart - Tasting Table
"Prepared horseradish refers to preserving that nose-burning quality for longer than a single use. Horseradish has a spicy, sinus-clearing bite that is best enjoyed fresh off the root. However, with the help of vinegar, horseradish gets a tangy complement and a preservation agent to make it last. Luckily you can leave the tear-jerking preparation and bottling involved in prepared horseradish to the pros by purchasing a prepared horseradish brand. That said, not all of them are worth buying."
"Woeber's Sandwich Pal horseradish sauce is certainly too thick to be anything but a spread, limiting its versatility. It's essentially a horseradish-flavored mayo. In fact, if you look at the ingredients list, "horseradish" is one of the last ingredients, behind eggs, oil, vinegar, and corn syrup. Despite detecting a spicy kick, horseradish was not front and center in this sauce. It might be a good condiment for the spice averse, but we wanted a concentrated horseradish flavor with more uses than a sandwich spread."
"We found negative reviews from Walmart customers that complain about both the taste and texture of Woeber's Sandwich Pal horseradish sauce. One review called the prepared horseradish, "oily egg sauce with some horseradish added. Smells like rotten eggs after it has been opened." Another bemoaned an overwhelming fat flavor that was "more oil than mayo taste" with "moderate horseradish heat.""
Prepared horseradish preserves the root's nose-burning bite with vinegar, adding tang and acting as a preservative. Woeber's Sandwich Pal horseradish sauce is a thick, creamy sandwich condiment resembling horseradish-flavored mayonnaise rather than a concentrated horseradish. The ingredients list places horseradish near the end, after eggs, oil, vinegar, and corn syrup, and the product delivers a noticeable but not dominant spicy kick. The thickness limits versatility to being primarily a spread. Some consumers may prefer its milder profile, while others seeking concentrated horseradish heat will find it lacking. Customer reviews cite oily taste, eggy smell, and moderate heat.
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