Spatini sauce mix
Spatini sauce mix is a dry, packaged seasoning mix produced by Lawry's. Originally developed in 1952 to be added to other ingredients to make an Italian-style "spaghetti sauce", it is also used variously to make a dip, in meatloaf, to season meatballs, and more.
Its formulation includes salt, sugar, onion, potato starch, spices, corn maltodextrin, garlic, beet, dextrose, yeast, guar gum, and carrot.
The mix was manufactured and distributed originally by Spatini Co., subsequently by Unilever and its subsidiary Lipton Foods, prior to Lawry's, a subsidiary of spice giant McCormick Co.
History
Spatini spaghetti sauce mix was originally developed and marketed by Russell G. Lakoff and Harry Seidman of Overbrook Hills, Pennsylvania, who registered their business in Philadelphia as Spatini Co. on September 4, 1952, selling the dry powdered mix packaged in boxes of three packets.The Spatini Co. also manufactured a brown gravy mix that was sold under the Spatini brand. In 1962, Spatini spaghetti sauce added a version with tomatoes already included, which was discontinued.
Lipton, an Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, subsidiary of Unilever, purchased Spatini Co. in 1976, and took over the manufacture, distribution, and marketing of the Spatini brand. Unilever shifted it from Lipton to its subsidiary Lawry's line in the mid-1980s, and Lawry's continued to promote and sell Spatini spaghetti sauce mix for home consumers, and introduce new recipes using the mix for commercial users.
Retail manufacturing of Spatini spaghetti sauce mix for home consumers ended in January 2007, but it continues to be manufactured and distributed commercially for restaurant and institutional use by Lawry's, which was sold by Unilever to McCormick & Company in 2008.