
Men's Health
Best Marinade: Soy Vay Veri Veri Teriyaki
125 Best Foods for Men ~ Eat Up! Men's Health named Soy Vay Veri Veri Teriyaki the Best Marinade in their featured 2008 Nutrition Awards. Works wonders on anything destined for the grill: chicken, salmon, even vegetable skewers. Just give your food a 30-minute soak first.

Frommer's
Where to Buy the Best of Everything, by Suzy Gershman
Once upon a time, a nice Chinese girl offered a nice Jewish boy a taste of her homemade marinated beef sticks. "This could be the start of something big," mused the nice Jewish boy: Soy Vay! A sauce was born. The original Chinese Marinade is now called Hoisin Garlic Asian Glaze and Marinade. Soy Vay makes five different marinades, all from natural ingredients and preservative free. Along with the original sauce, try the Cha-Cha Chinese Chicken Salad Dressing and the Veri Veri Teriyaki sauce.

Mercury News
Wasabiyaki! Wasabi top choices, from sauce to sorbet
Wasabiyaki! This sauce from a Felton company was one of the best of the show's many wasabi products, which ranged from wasabi-coated peanuts to wasabi-ginger dipping sauce, wasabi-infused caviar and squeeze-bottle wasabi. Read more...
Muscle & Fitness Magazine
Healthy Update for Chinese Chicken Salad
You'll find Chinese chicken salad on the menu of many Los Angeles restaurants, from Wolfgang Puck's Chinois on Main to the more casual Chin Chin chain to even Hamburger Hamlet. This seemingly healthy salad hides high-fat ingredients that can add unwanted fat and calories to your diet. CSPI estimates 750 calories and 49 grams of fat per serving. Read more...

Apples To Apples
Apples To Apples, Jewish Edition
And you know the award-winning game, Apples to Apples, published by Out of the Box Publishing? In the Jewish Edition, soy sauce is described as, "...A kosher variety is called "Soy Vay!"
San Francisco Chronicle
Veri Veri Teriyaki is saucy success
Oy vay, need a name for this," Scher says he mumbled. It didn't take much longer to go from oy vay to "soy vay," and a product was born. Today, Soy Vay sauces are sold by tens of thousands of retailers around the country. Scher, 44, is president of Soy Vay Enterprises, Inc., which has a legion of loyal customers. Read more...
San Francisco Chronicle
Herb Caen
WHAT ELSE is new? Well, how about a kosher soy sauce called "Soy Vay"? Linda Diggins discovered it in the Oriental food section of Larry's Gourmet Grocer in Seattle...
September 26, 1994
...Last with the latest: Monday's dumbest of many dumb items was the one about the "discovery" in a Seattle gourmet grocery of Soy Vay, a kosher soy sauce. Turns out this stuff has been around since '82 and is made in California (Felton). I don't mind being twitted and taunted over this, but if I knew so much about kosher soy sauce, I'd keep quiet.
September 28, 1994

Cooking for Cher
Essential food items for healthy eating." We were flattered and excited to find that this is how Cher regards our sauces in the cookbook entitled "Cooking for Cher" by Andy Ennis.
Food Illustrated 10 of the Best
Salad Dressings and marinades put to the test
SOY VAY VERI VERI TERIYAKI
Decidedly the freshest-tasting teriyaki marinade, made with fresh garlic and ginger. The piece of chicken under scrutiny came out of the oven with a wonderful sesame seed glaze and tasted sweetly caramelized.
Heritage
Kashrut is on the menu
She was 'soy'; I was 'vay,'" said Scher of the partner whom he since has bought out but who remains a close friend.
"When Jewish people see the 'Soy Vay,' they buy because they think it is cute, but once they try it, they are really hooked on it," Scher said. Read more...
Daily News - New York's Hometown Newspapter
Culinary Curiosities
Exhibitors offer up epicurean exotica at Fancy Food Show
Soy Vay Enterprises ("Jewish boy meets Chinese girl and - Soy Vay! - a sauce is born!") was peddling kosher teriyaki sauces and marinades. Eddie Scher, the owner, distributed saucy chicken bits from a sauté pan. The company name, depicted in a Hebraic looking type font, he carefully and repeated explained, "is a play on the words, "Oy vey".
"Just making sure!" caroled Scher. "You cannot be Jewish and walk by our product and not buy it," he pitched. "And once you try it, you will definitely want more!"