#JanFam Corner: Gallant

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I’m really feeling the debut album by Gallant, who kinda comes off like a millennial Maxwell. The singer had some really poetic things to say about the influence of Janet Jackson’s “I Get Lonely” on the album:

“There’s plenty of Janet Jackson songs, but that one in particular, the way she starts it — it’s very bare. Her voice kind of warbles a little bit, and that just adds to the overall sense of vulnerability, honesty, and humility that the lyrics pose. Sonically, production-wise, the way it comes in and stops at random parts makes it feel almost religious. [Producers] Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis are incredible, mainly for the work that they did with Janet. It was always very collaborative and something special going on. And that connection between artist and producer is obviously something I value too, which is why I worked with only one producer for this project. It helps to really get into that mindset. I first heard ‘I Get Lonely’ way back when I was really young and I’ve been obsessed with it ever since.”

You can really hear the influence on songs like “Bone + Tissue.”

Craig’s Spice World: Ninja Squirrel Sriracha

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O.K., I’m the first to admit that I’m a sriracha snob. Used to be that if I went to a restaurant or someone’s house and they didn’t have Huy Fong “rooster sauce” sriracha, I’d hit them with this face.

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I even had a “rooster” t-shirt that I’d rock with the utmost pride.

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(me in spirit)

But recently I had a revelation, and as gospel great Karen Clark-Sheard once sang, “I’ve Been Changed.”

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Here’s what happened. Longtime readers of my newsletter might remember the time I had mad beef with an in-store noodle bar at a Whole Foods in South Carolina because they didn’t offer sriracha as a condiment. I mean, who tf runs a noodle bar without sriracha?

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Anyway, I wrote an angry email to the manager complaining about the situation, but not surprisingly, I never got a response.

Fast forward nearly a year later and I was back at the same Whole Foods. I tried to bypass the noodle bar but the food smells got the best of me.

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I got my bowl and when I arrived at the eat-in area, I saw that they actually had some sriracha. But it was some brand I ain’t never heard of called Ninja Squirrel. Of course, I got an attitude. I mean, what does a squirrel have to do with sriracha? And why’d it have to be a “ninja” squirrel? What kind of stereotype-perpetuating bullshit is that?

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Anyway, I tasted it, trying my best not to like it. But I couldn’t resist. Ninja Squirrel sriracha has a heartier, deeper flavor than “rooster sauce,” and the garlic content stops just short of being friend repelling. (“Rooster sauce,” admittedly can sometimes leave you with lingering funk mouth.)

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I’m now a full-on Ninja Squirrel sriracha devotee. You can only buy it at Whole Foods, but it’s well worth the trip. Also, according to this story, Ninja Squirrel sriracha is made without perservatives, so assumably it’s not going to slowly kill you from the inside in the name of spice. Eat up!