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rectangletangle | 6 years ago

Not exactly the same thing. It's like mayo but thinner and sweeter, and has little green fleks in it.

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luminiferous|6 years ago

Is it riffing off ranch dressing? I've heard that ranch is associated with the US, outside of the US.

Edit: looks like "american sauce" can refer to a multitude of things. Typically it seems to either be some kind of ranch or thousand island.[1] Both of which are separate from "Sauce Americaine", from French cuisine.[2]

2nd edit: If the OP is talking specifically about Heinz brand "American Sauce", apparently the closest match in American cuisine is either thousand island or big mac sauce/"secret sauce" used on burgers (which is based on thousand island). It is pretty American, come to think of it.

[1] https://www.thedailymeal.com/news/travel/which-mayonnaise-he...

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sauce_Am%C3%A9ricaine

rectangletangle|6 years ago

https://www.hollandsupermarket.eu/remia-fritessaus-american-...

http://www.typicaldutchstuff.com/ahamericanfritessaus-pi-364...

https://cf.geekdo-images.com/camo/271763ae14b82c0f612b6b9f61...

This is what I'm referring to.

Digging a little deeper it appears like McDonalds may have actually invented the sauce to appeal to the Dutch market, where fritessaus is popular (instead of tomato ketchup). Because McDonalds is American, their take on fritessaus grew into it's own thing called "American Fritessaus," or simply "American Saus."