A.1. Sauce
A.1. Sauce is a brand of brown sauce produced by Brand & co, a subsidiary of Premier Foods in the United Kingdom and in North America by Kraft Heinz. Created in London, it was sold from 1831 as a condiment for "fish, meat, fowl and game" dishes in the United Kingdom. The makers introduced the product to Canada, and later to the U.S. where it was later marketed as a steak sauce.
History and ownership
In 1824, Henderson William Brand, a chef to George IV of [the United Kingdom|King George IV] of the United Kingdom, created the original brown sauce on which A.1. is based. A popular myth has it that the king declared it "A.1." and thus, the name was born. The term "A.1." originated as an international ship insurance certification by Lloyd's Register to describe a "first rate" ship.The sauce went into commercial production under the Brand & Co. label in 1831, marketed as a condiment for "fish, meat and fowl", and continued production under this label after bankruptcy forced ownership of Brand & Co. to be transferred to W. H. Withall in 1850.
The product label proclaims; "Est. 1862."
It was renamed A.1. in 1873, after a trademark dispute between creator Henderson William Brand and Dence & Mason, who had since purchased Brand & Co. from Withall. It continued to be produced by Brand & Co. until the late 1970s at the firm's factory in Vauxhall, London until it fell out of favor within the UK domestic market. A.1. brand in the UK was owned by Ranks Hovis McDougall for a time and currently owned by Premier Foods. A.1. Sauce was still, as of June 2020, produced in England and exported to Asia.
A.1. was officially registered as a trademark in the US in 1895, and imported and distributed in the United States by G. F. Heublein & Brothers in 1906. Beginning in the early 1960s, it was marketed in the US as "A.1. Steak Sauce". R. J. [Reynolds Tobacco Company|R. J. Reynolds]—which merged with Nabisco in 1985 to form RJR Nabisco—acquired Heublein in 1982. In 1999, Kraft Foods acquired Nabisco, including the licence for the A.1. brand in North America.
In the USA during the 1980s, two new flavors of A.1. were introduced, representing the first expansion of the trademark in North America. These varieties were soon discontinued. In 2000, an A.1. line of marinades was launched. In May 2014, Kraft Foods in North America announced it was dropping the word "steak" from the A.1. name, reverting to A.1. Sauce to "reflect modern dining habits".