Looking to start making my own hot sauce
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- Longhorned
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
Where do you want to start? Dried whole chilies?
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
I enjoy spicy food. Only preference would be easily available ingredients (supermarket) and not a huge amount of cooking skill required (I'm not skilled). Wide open otherwise. Wife bought me a hot sauce of the month Christmas present, and I enjoyed almost all varieties.Longhorned wrote:Where do you want to start? Dried whole chilies?
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- scumdevils86
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
We talking sauce like cholula/tapatio or Frank's or Texas Pete or....?
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
Wide open. Whatever's good.scumdevils86 wrote:We talking sauce like cholula/tapatio or Frank's or Texas Pete or....?
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
Hassan Adams?scumdevils86 wrote:We talking sauce like cholula/tapatio or Frank's or Texas Pete or....?
Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
- Longhorned
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
So you'll want to pick up some appetizing-looking red chili pods (I go for Hatch), remove the stems and seeds, and rinse. Put them in a pot and cover with water and bring it to a boil, and then simmer at a reasonable simmerness for 20 minutes. Take it off the heat and stick in an immersion blender. If you don't have one, dump the whole thing in a blender. After you puree it, run it through a sieve to take out the skins.
Now you have a chili sauce, which is really just a base for making up your own recipe. But you've got to write down what you do, or else you'll be like me and unable to duplicate or pass on what you did once you hit it out of the park.
If you're following recipes to make an enchilada sauce, it makes a huge difference if you make your own chicken stock for it. Besides, then you have the chicken ready for the enchiladas.
I used to follow a recipe for both New Mexico red chili sauce and the green chili sauce that I swear was on the NM state government website, but I just tried and I couldn't find it. Maybe your googling will be better than mine today.
All this talk about eating in New Mexico as this amazing experience is all true, but you can make that stuff at home. Pick up some nixtamal (I can't get it in my neighborhood) and make some fresh tortillas and stack them with the green or red sauce and cheese and top with a runny fried egg. If you make some real refried beans with that (and you can cheat and start with canned pintos), you'll hit a flavor zone that transcends everyday life. A gringo secret that will make some people here angry: Instead of lard, try making them with butter, and grate some parmigiano reggiano over it, or Wisconsin Sartori reserve. Just a different dimension with the depth, richness and umami.
Now you have a chili sauce, which is really just a base for making up your own recipe. But you've got to write down what you do, or else you'll be like me and unable to duplicate or pass on what you did once you hit it out of the park.
If you're following recipes to make an enchilada sauce, it makes a huge difference if you make your own chicken stock for it. Besides, then you have the chicken ready for the enchiladas.
I used to follow a recipe for both New Mexico red chili sauce and the green chili sauce that I swear was on the NM state government website, but I just tried and I couldn't find it. Maybe your googling will be better than mine today.
All this talk about eating in New Mexico as this amazing experience is all true, but you can make that stuff at home. Pick up some nixtamal (I can't get it in my neighborhood) and make some fresh tortillas and stack them with the green or red sauce and cheese and top with a runny fried egg. If you make some real refried beans with that (and you can cheat and start with canned pintos), you'll hit a flavor zone that transcends everyday life. A gringo secret that will make some people here angry: Instead of lard, try making them with butter, and grate some parmigiano reggiano over it, or Wisconsin Sartori reserve. Just a different dimension with the depth, richness and umami.
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
I used to make my one enchilada sauce using dried chilies. I can't get Hatch out here so I just go the the 99c store which does have a pretty good selection of standard chilies. Soak the dried chilies in water for 20 minutes or so, then roast them over a gas flame, then peel the blackened skin off. Blend.
Once you start making your own enchilada sauce you can never go back to the canned.
When I was in Tucson last time my dad introduced me to pablano chilies which aren't common where I live. I did find some frozen at Grocery Outlet but haven't done anything with them yet.
Once you start making your own enchilada sauce you can never go back to the canned.
When I was in Tucson last time my dad introduced me to pablano chilies which aren't common where I live. I did find some frozen at Grocery Outlet but haven't done anything with them yet.
Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
Longhorned wrote:simmer at a reasonable simmerness for 20 minutes
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Yep! My mother makes enchiladas twice a month, huge batches so I get to take some home. They are devoured within 3-4 days.Merkin wrote:Once you start making your own enchilada sauce you can never go back to the canned.
Cant remember what all is in this, but we fed about 25 people with this batch. Probably 4 or 5 bags of chilies skinned and cooked
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
Anyone have a more condimenty style recipe like the above too? I'll probably use the enchilada, but was thinking about the condiment as well b/c I put hot sauce on pretty much everything.scumdevils86 wrote:We talking sauce like cholula/tapatio or Frank's or Texas Pete or....?
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- scumdevils86
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
I saw that one and it looked good. I was a little put off by the 2 week fermentation/steeping. Is that just a vinegar based thing? I do love Louisiana style, and most of that seems to require a few weeks.scumdevils86 wrote:I want to try this one just for a starter
http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/emer ... ecipe.html
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
scumdevils86 wrote:I want to try this one just for a starter
http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/emer ... ecipe.html
Made this once, turned out pretty good, even grew and dried cayenne peppers myself, but in the end, I preferred the taste of the store-bought version ..
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But in my book, you gotta get to White Castle before the weirdos show up!
Tonight he gets Happy-Go-Jackie on the big white guy like a donkey eating a waffle!
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Tonight he gets Happy-Go-Jackie on the big white guy like a donkey eating a waffle!
Sweet Sassy Molassey, get out the checkbook and pay Grandma for the rubdown!
- Longhorned
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
I love ranchero sauce, "cowboy ketchup", which is on the table of every Mexican restaurant in Phoenix, but nowhere else in the world. Clearly a lot of people in Phoenix know how to make it. I've found recipes online and tried, failed, corrected, and failed again and again. I'd appreciate it if anyone here can help.
Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
Longhorned wrote:I love ranchero sauce, "cowboy ketchup", which is on the table of every Mexican restaurant in Phoenix, but nowhere else in the world. Clearly a lot of people in Phoenix know how to make it. I've found recipes online and tried, failed, corrected, and failed again and again. I'd appreciate it if anyone here can help.
That's a tough one, because I could never identify the right chiles - Arbol? Cascabel? Red Jalapenos? Fresnos? Habaneros? Others? A blend? - so I buy the one I liked the most which is this: Poblano Hot Sauce Salsa Ranchera. Made in Tucson.
But in my book, you gotta get to White Castle before the weirdos show up!
Tonight he gets Happy-Go-Jackie on the big white guy like a donkey eating a waffle!
Sweet Sassy Molassey, get out the checkbook and pay Grandma for the rubdown!
Tonight he gets Happy-Go-Jackie on the big white guy like a donkey eating a waffle!
Sweet Sassy Molassey, get out the checkbook and pay Grandma for the rubdown!
- Longhorned
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
Holy shit, B, you saved me. Thanks. Ordering now.
Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
Sure! Let me know if that site worked for ya, I may send some to far-flung friends ...Longhorned wrote:Holy shit, B, you saved me. Thanks. Ordering now.
But in my book, you gotta get to White Castle before the weirdos show up!
Tonight he gets Happy-Go-Jackie on the big white guy like a donkey eating a waffle!
Sweet Sassy Molassey, get out the checkbook and pay Grandma for the rubdown!
Tonight he gets Happy-Go-Jackie on the big white guy like a donkey eating a waffle!
Sweet Sassy Molassey, get out the checkbook and pay Grandma for the rubdown!
Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
Oh my god, I've been trying to remember/find who made the greatest jalapeno sauce I've ever had without going down to a Fry's off of I19 and this is most definitely the company! I'll have to try their other stuff now that I know I can order online.Reydituto wrote:
That's a tough one, because I could never identify the right chiles - Arbol? Cascabel? Red Jalapenos? Fresnos? Habaneros? Others? A blend? - so I buy the one I liked the most which is this: Poblano Hot Sauce Salsa Ranchera. Made in Tucson.
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
Making a hot sauce from fresh chilies right now. I ran into a big batch of fresh red jalapeños, so I bought the lot - 1.5 pounds. I stemmed then crushed in the food processor, added a couple tablespoons of salt and let ferment at room temperature overnight. Then added some distilled vinegar and I'm letting it sit out for a week before I put them in the blender and then strain them to make a fully smooth and liquid, bright red, very hot hot sauce.
- Longhorned
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
You guys ever get this in Tucson?
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- the real dill
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
I had a bumper crop of habaneros last year. I mean I literally had like 5 pounds of them. You can't give them away. No one wants habanero, and you can literally use like 3 in a whole pot of chili to make it hot as shit.
So we made this recipe and canned it. Gave a bunch of bottles away. It's really good. Perfect on fish tacos.
http://www.rickbayless.com/recipe/habanero-hot-sauce/" target="_blank
So we made this recipe and canned it. Gave a bunch of bottles away. It's really good. Perfect on fish tacos.
http://www.rickbayless.com/recipe/habanero-hot-sauce/" target="_blank
- Longhorned
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
I don't understand. I want habaneros very badly but even the Mexican markets in my town can't keep them preserved long enough. Habaneros are the king of chili peppers. What color are yours?the real dill wrote:I had a bumper crop of habaneros last year. I mean I literally had like 5 pounds of them. You can't give them away. No one wants habanero, and you can literally use like 3 in a whole pot of chili to make it hot as shit.
So we made this recipe and canned it. Gave a bunch of bottles away. It's really good. Perfect on fish tacos.
http://www.rickbayless.com/recipe/habanero-hot-sauce/" target="_blank
- the real dill
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
They are orange, and apparently extremely easy to grow. For example, I had 4 jalapeno plants that yielded about 3 pounds of peppers. 1 habanero plant gave me 5 pounds. There were more peppers than leaves. I was picking a bowl full every day for a month. I didn't plant them this year because I didn't want to have to deal with them. They stay preserved perfectly fine jarred,sealed, and refrigerated using the recipe above. I love habanero, but 1 pepper goes a long way. I had bags full.Longhorned wrote:I don't understand. I want habaneros very badly but even the Mexican markets in my town can't keep them preserved long enough. Habaneros are the king of chili peppers. What color are yours?the real dill wrote:I had a bumper crop of habaneros last year. I mean I literally had like 5 pounds of them. You can't give them away. No one wants habanero, and you can literally use like 3 in a whole pot of chili to make it hot as shit.
So we made this recipe and canned it. Gave a bunch of bottles away. It's really good. Perfect on fish tacos.
http://www.rickbayless.com/recipe/habanero-hot-sauce/" target="_blank
Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
Ghetto Fry's, first and roger, has this. I give it to the kids because it's mild.Longhorned wrote:You guys ever get this in Tucson?
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
Dill, did you have any difficulty achieving jalapeños with enough heat? I've heard it's hard to grow them yourself hot because they need a little stress to bring out the capsaicin. Otherwise, supposedly, a healthy amount of water and a good fertile soil makes them come out as mild as bell peppers. How were yours?
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
Mmmm. . . habers.
- Longhorned
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
What sauce do you put on your own food?wyo-cat wrote:Ghetto Fry's, first and roger, has this. I give it to the kids because it's mild.Longhorned wrote:You guys ever get this in Tucson?
Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
I grow them in an elevated garden that's made from 2 x 10's that's about 3 1/2" high. The growing medium is potting mix and it drains very well. Well drained soil is the key, if you don't have it, make it. I have a bumper crop growing as we speak.Longhorned wrote:Dill, did you have any difficulty achieving jalapeños with enough heat? I've heard it's hard to grow them yourself hot because they need a little stress to bring out the capsaicin. Otherwise, supposedly, a healthy amount of water and a good fertile soil makes them come out as mild as bell peppers. How were yours?
I'm gonna try them in an earth box of my own construct soon...when I have the time.
Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
My go to, can't live without sauce is Sriracha. For Mexican, I go for Castillo Habenero sauce in orange or green. It's been renamed, Mexico Lindo, but it's the same sauce.Longhorned wrote:What sauce do you put on your own food?wyo-cat wrote:Ghetto Fry's, first and roger, has this. I give it to the kids because it's mild.Longhorned wrote:You guys ever get this in Tucson?
- scumdevils86
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
don't use many green sauces and this one isn't very spicy but my word is it tasty. just marvelous. i picked up like 4 bottles last time i was at tj's
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- Longhorned
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
I doubt I could get the Castillo or Mexico Lindo outside of the Sonoran desert or Arizona or California. But I'll have to pick some up or order online.
- the real dill
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
Mine have always been pretty mild so I always thought I just got a mild plant. Very interesting. Unfortunately they're in the same bed with tomatoes and other vegetables so it would be impossible for me to stress them.Longhorned wrote:Dill, did you have any difficulty achieving jalapeños with enough heat? I've heard it's hard to grow them yourself hot because they need a little stress to bring out the capsaicin. Otherwise, supposedly, a healthy amount of water and a good fertile soil makes them come out as mild as bell peppers. How were yours?
Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
Hey dill, how big is your garden? And do you have any pics of it?
Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
Amazon has it. Point, Click...Burn.Longhorned wrote:I doubt I could get the Castillo or Mexico Lindo outside of the Sonoran desert or Arizona or California. But I'll have to pick some up or order online.
- the real dill
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
Small. 2 8x4 raised beds. I can post a pic later. It's nothing special. Right now I have tomatoes, zucchini, squash, jalapenos, and serranos. I usually grow onions and cilantro so I basically have a homemade pico de gallo factory.azgreg wrote:Hey dill, how big is your garden? And do you have any pics of it?
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Last edited by the real dill on Wed Oct 07, 2015 5:19 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
My wife wants to do something like this.
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- Longhorned
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
"Dill, what's yours like?"
"What color is it?"
"How big is it?"
"And do you have any pics of it?"
"What color is it?"
"How big is it?"
"And do you have any pics of it?"
Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
In AZ, you don't necessarily want raised beds. Being above ground makes the soil dry out quicker. It really depends on what you are growing. Look into local sources to find out how to grow veggies in Phoenix.
- Longhorned
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
This is some of the most incredible stuff ever:
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Sunchang gochujang, a Korean chili paste, which is made from sun-dried chilies and fermented bean paste (miso). It's super hot and filled with umami. I've been cooking with it all the time.
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Sunchang gochujang, a Korean chili paste, which is made from sun-dried chilies and fermented bean paste (miso). It's super hot and filled with umami. I've been cooking with it all the time.
http://www.seriouseats.com/2010/06/goch ... ments.html" target="_blankGochujang is a definite staple in the Korean kitchen, like lard to a Southerner.
- scumdevils86
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
dang. i have some gringofied crappy gochujang at home now (i'm actually marinading chicken in it right now with soy, garlic and sesame oil for lettuce wraps tonight). i want to try that.
- ghostwhitehorse
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
Recently discovered this bit of awesomeness!
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Mmmmmmmm!
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Mmmmmmmm!
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
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I've decided Sriracha isn't a hot sauce. It's a ketchup that happens to be made with jalapeños instead of tomatoes. Ketchup doesn't have to be made with tomato. The earliest ketchup was made of mushrooms instead of tomatoes. There's even a ketchup made from bananas instead of tomatoes. Anyway, I love Sriracha, and I'm starting to have no use for the Heinz, because Sriracha simply replaces it.
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
My go to sauce.
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Love the 've! Stop with the: Would of - Could of - Should of - Must of - Might of
- Longhorned
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
I can never run out of Cholula "Original". Have to keep a backup bottle.
How is the chipotle version?
How is the chipotle version?
Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
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Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
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Whir in a blender. Truly amazing.
- ghostwhitehorse
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
Longhorned wrote:
I've decided Sriracha isn't a hot sauce. It's a ketchup that happens to be made with jalapeños instead of tomatoes. Ketchup doesn't have to be made with tomato. The earliest ketchup was made of mushrooms instead of tomatoes. There's even a ketchup made from bananas instead of tomatoes. Anyway, I love Sriracha, and I'm starting to have no use for the Heinz, because Sriracha simply replaces it.
actually. . .http://www.kitchendaily.com/read/8-thin ... ut-ketchup" target="_blank
1727 edition of Compleat Housewife; or, Accomplished Gentlewoman’s Companion by Eliza Smith. This popular recipe for “English Katchop” called for anchovies, shallots, white wine vinegar, two types of white wine and a complex spice blend of mace, ginger, cloves and other flavors, resembling more of a fish sauce.
- Longhorned
- Posts: 14758
- Joined: Tue Jun 03, 2014 1:04 pm
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Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
That actually sounds pretty good.
Re: Looking to start making my own hot sauce
It's tasty, but not quite as much kick as I'd like. Original can't be beat, but the Chile Lime is pretty amazing as well.Longhorned wrote:I can never run out of Cholula "Original". Have to keep a backup bottle.
How is the chipotle version?
Love the 've! Stop with the: Would of - Could of - Should of - Must of - Might of