Fiery foods are, forgive me, are hot right now. A few years ago nobody north of Texas had heard of chipotle. Now it's on everyone's spice rack and there's even a restaurant chain named after the smoked jalapeno. But in Bayou country, hot stuff has always been big. The first bottled hot sauces came out of Louisiana, home of Tabasco Sauce. Today there are lots of great hot and spicy barbecue sauces on the market. Some just burn from capsaicin (the active ingredient in chili peppers), but the best are complex blends with the heat is tempered with sweetness and savory. Bayou Bite: My version of a great Louisiana Barbecue Sauce is a wonderful blend of sweet and hot peppers. Even if you don't like hot stuff, you really should try this one. Bayou Bite is a finishing and dipping sauce. It loses much of its fresh, bright goodness when cooked. So paint it on your meats near the end and serve it in a bowl for dipping ribs, and chicken, or spoon a few dollops on steaks and chops. The recipe below is medium hot. If you want it hotter, add 1 more tablespoon of Chiptle Tabasco Sauce. Go ahead, add more. I dare you. Bayou Bite is especially good on shellfish, especially shrimp and oysters. I've even been known to dump it on top of a brick of cream cheese and serve it with crackers (at right). Yield. Makes 1 1/2 cups. Click here to calculate how much you need and for tips on saucing strategies. Ingredients About Steen's. CS Steen started his sugar mill in Louisiana in 1910 making sugar, cane syrup, and molasses. The mill in Abbeville, LA still uses open kettles and steam driven equipment. If you can't find Steen's, molasses will do. About Tabasco Chipotle. According to company records, Tabasco sauce was first made in the 1860s after Edmund McIlhenny planted hot peppers on his family's property on Avery Island, LA. He experimented with pepper sauce recipes until he found one he liked and then put it in cologne bottles with sprinkler tops because it was too hot to be poured on food. By 1868 McIlhenny started to market Tabasco Sauce. His process is still used today, and Avery Island remains the headquarters for the worldwide company that is still owned and operated by direct descendants of Edmund McIlhenny. Avery Island is about 2.5 hours west of New Orleans, and the charming spot is open to visitors. Do this 2) Trrn the heat on the grill down to medium. Peel the garlic cloves and wrap them in foil. Put them on the grill for about 15 minutes or until they are tender. 3) Put the pepper and garlic in a blender and puree. You should get about 1 cup of liquid. If you have more or less pepper juice, adjust the rest of the ingredients accordingly. 4) Add the rest of the ingredients and liquefy. Taste and adjust the flavors to your preferences. Add more Tabasco if you want it hotter or more syrup if you want it sweeter. Bottle it in a clean jar and refrigerate. This page was revised 9/21/08
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