Carlsbad’s Bitchin’ Sauce Just Dropped A Glossy New Cookbook, And Reopened One Of San Diego’s Messiest Food-World Feuds In The Process

Carlsbad’s Bitchin’ Sauce is back in the headlines with a splashy new cookbook, but behind the glossy photos and viral dips lies one of San Diego’s most bitter family business feuds. As the brand celebrates national growth, critics are resurfacing explosive allegations about ownership, loyalty, and what really happened behind the scenes.

Bitchin’ Sauce founder and CEO Starr Edwards has released “Sauced.: 30 Totally Bitchin’ Bowls,” a new cookbook built around the brand’s viral almond-based dips, pitching them not just as something to dunk chips into, but as ready-made flavor engines for full meals. The book leans into the company’s cult following with bowl-style recipes that span savory and sweet territory, using different Bitchin’ Sauce flavors as sauces, marinades, drizzles, and mix-ins, an evolution of the brand’s long-running “beyond dipping” recipe strategy.

The release is drawing attention because Bitchin’ Sauce isn’t just another local success story that went national, it’s a household name with a backstory locals still argue about. The company’s rise from San Diego farmers markets to major retail shelves has been accompanied for years by a very public, very personal family split that continues to shadow the brand online, surfacing in comment sections whenever Bitchin’ Sauce pops up in the news.

Bitchin’ Sauce’s origin story has been told in different ways depending on who’s talking, but the basic arc is the same: a small, family-involved startup becomes a breakout hit, then turns into a high-revenue packaged-food business. Over time, however, the company became the center of an internal family dispute that spilled into legal claims and lingering resentment, with Starr Edwards’ brothers Ryan and Porter Smith publicly alleging they helped build the company and were later pushed out, claims that Bitchin’ Sauce leadership has disputed in forceful terms in past correspondence shared with SanDiegoVille.

Following SanDiegoVille’s previous reporting on the family feud, Bitchin’ Sauce blocked our publication on Instagram. Some viewed this action as emblematic of how the company handles criticism rather than engaging with it directly.

The unresolved history of Bitchin Sauce is part of why the cookbook announcement is landing differently than a typical product launch. On social media, plenty of locals still praise the sauces while others use the moment to relitigate the family fight, accusing the company of rewriting its own story or changing product quality as it scaled. At the same time, the brothers have continued building their own food ventures and have promoted JeeSauce as a direct competitor, positioning it as the “original” spirit of what they say was taken from them, fueling a rivalry that has become as much marketing narrative as personal grievance.

The cookbook itself is a calculated flex: it frames Bitchin’ Sauce as a full-on lifestyle brand rather than a refrigerated dip you grab on impulse. Even the title feels designed to convert fandom into deeper buy-ins, more recipes, more occasions to use the product, more reasons to keep it in the fridge, while also reinforcing that the company is still expanding its footprint and creative output regardless of who’s mad about the past.

For Bitchin’ Sauce, “Sauced.” is both a new revenue lane and a reputation test. It gives devoted fans something tangible to rally around, while handing critics a fresh hook to bring old accusations back into the spotlight, exactly the kind of polarizing local-business saga that keeps a brand trending long after the farmers market days are gone.