AmazingRibs.com is supported by our Pitmaster Club. Also, when you buy with links on our site we may earn a finder’s fee. Click to see how we test and review products.

Controlled Burn Hot Sauce Fires Up Your Favorite Dishes

Share on:
controlled burn hot sauce

Why settle for bland bottled hot sauce when you can create your own?

There are a gazillion hot pepper sauces on the market. The problem I have with most of them is that they are all about the heat. Well I’m all about the flavor. So I needed a recipe for a fiery sauce with multiple dimensions, complexity, and depth of flavor because sauce too hot makes me cry like a Cubs fan. I was inspired by the Japanese mix of seven powdered spices called shichimi, which features red pepper flakes, orange peel, and ginger.

I know you have your favorite commercial bottled hot sauce, but I have long believed that once you reach a certain age, you should have a handful of signature recipes that you can proudly call your own. Among them are a house barbecue sauce from scratch, a Bloody Mary recipe, and a hot pepper sauce. You serve them, and when, inevitably, you are asked for the recipe, you can just smile wryly and say quietly “It’s my secret and it will go to the grave with me”. Then you can give them a bottle as a very personal gift. Alternatively you can use the recipe as a bargaining chip.

Barbecue sauce recipes abound on this site and we even have a killer smoked Bloody Mary, so here’s your hot sauce. I call it “Controlled Burn Hot Sauce” because it has a serious kick, but it also has strong pepper flavor, it is very complex, and it works well as an ingredient in barbecue sauces or other dishes. Use it in chili recipes. Drizzle it on eggs, clams and oysters, burgers, fajitas, burritos, pizza, hot dogs, burgers, in baked beans, or anything Cajun or Creole, and a lot of Chinese and Mexican dishes. Mix it 1:1 with fresh chopped tomato and a little cilantro for a killer salsa. Mix it 1:1 with catsup to make a killer shrimp cocktail sauce. Add Worcestershire, soy, oil, and honey for a smokin’ wing sauce. As you can see, it is chunky, but it can easily be run through a strainer to make a pucketa pucketa sauce. You get the picture. It is a building block.

For another great source of heat, check my recipe for Harissa Hot Pepper Paste. It is easy to make and I use it on more and more foods all the time. For more info about hot stuff, read my article on the Science of Chiles.

Controlled Burn Homemade Hot Sauce Recipe


controlled burn hot sauce
Tried this recipe?Tell others what you thought of it and give it a star rating below.
3.95 from 60 votes
Here's a recipe for a signature hot pepper sauce you can easily make at home. Focused on flavor first, our controlled burn hot sauce is infinitely more complex than most sauces and has just the right amount of heat to amp up foods without overpowering them. The recipe makes enough to give some away as gifts.

Course:
Sauces and Condiments
Cuisine:
American
,
Southwestern
difficulty scale

Makes:

Servings: 1 quart

Takes:

Prep Time: 1 hour
Cook Time: 40 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1 pound pepper blend (see below)
  • cup sweet Kansas City style barbecue sauce
  • 1 cup distilled white vinegar
  • cup balsamic vinegar
  • ¼ cup triple sec (orange liqueur)
  • 4 cloves garlic
  • 1 small onion
  • 1 can chipotle in adobo sauce (4 oz can)
  • 1 tablespoon peeled and grated ginger
  • ½ tablespoon ground black pepper
  • 2 teaspoons Morton Coarse Kosher Salt
  • 1 teaspoon dried oregano
  • ¼ teaspoon mustard powder
  • ½ cup pineapple juice
  • 1 lime, juiced
  • ½ teaspoon vanilla extract

A Good Red Pepper Blend:

  • ½ pound fresh sweet red bell peppers (about 1 large one)
  • ¼ pound fresh habanero or Scotch bonnet peppers (100,000 - 350,000 Scoville Heat Units)
  • ¼ pound fresh red jalapeño peppers (5,000 - 10,000 SHU)
  • ¼ pound fresh red serrano peppers (about 25,000 SHU) or cayenne peppers (30,000 - 50,000 SHU)
Notes:
About the pepper blend. The recipe calls for 1 pound of pepper blend, but the raw components weigh more than 1 pound. After you remove the seeds and stems, you should have about 1 pound remaining.
About the vinegar. The vinegar is needed to extract flavor and act as a preservative. I like the neutral flavor of distilled vinegar because it lets the peppers shine. Other vinegars, like cider vinegar, have too much flavor.
About the salt. Remember, kosher salt is half the concentration of table salt so if you use table salt, use half as much. Click here to read more about salt and how it works.
Stylin'. I encourage you to stick close to my recipe at first, and then riff on it. Make it your own to suit your taste. If you want afterburner heat, increase the habaneros content. Sweeter? More pineapple juice. More garlic? Go for it. Try adding lemon juice, orange juice, orange marmalade, mango, papaya, pineapple, molasses, honey, Worcestershire, tequila, roasted carrot, tomatillo, cumin, cilantro, or curry powder. Try grilling the peppers, garlic, and onion. Switch the triple sec to Grand Marnier, or Bourbon. Add 1/2 teaspoon liquid smoke.
Metric conversion:

These recipes were created in US Customary measurements and the conversion to metric is being done by calculations. They should be accurate, but it is possible there could be an error. If you find one, please let us know in the comments at the bottom of the page

Method

  • Prep. Put on rubber gloves. Don't attempt this without them. You might even want to wear safety glasses while making it. Habaneros are no foolin', mister. That's pepper spray. Start by cutting off the stems of the peppers. Slice the peppers in half lengthwise. Pull out the seeds, but leave in the white veins. Cut out any soft or rotted sections. Rinse them inside and out, and chop them into chunks about 1/2" (1.3 cm) each. Put them into a food processor with the barbecue sauce. Turn it on and let 'er rip for 2 to 4 minutes until it is pureed and slushy. Dump into a 2 quart non-reactive pot. Add the two vinegars and triple sec.
  • Peel and chop the garlic and onion into pea-size chunks. Put the garlic, onion, chipotle in adobo, grated ginger, black pepper, salt, oregano, mustard powder, pineapple juice, lime juice, and vanilla extract into the food processor, puree, and add to the pot. Stir.
  • Cook. The next step is cooking, and I recommend you do it outside. This pot will puts out some strong, but not objectionable, vapors. But surely someone will complain. So use your grill, or your grill's sideburner. Bring to a boil, then dial back to a simmer and let it burble with the cover on for about 30 minutes.
  • Put in a clean tight lidded bottle and store in a cool dark place. To preserve its fresh brightness, store in a refrigerator. If you prefer, after aging it for a week or more, you can run it through a fine mesh strainer and bottle it without the chunks, like a commercial hot sauce.
  • Serve. Use this flavorful sauce as you would any hot sauce.

Related articles

Published On: 1/19/2017 Last Modified: 2/13/2024

Share on:
  • Meathead, BBQ Hall of Famer - Founder and publisher of AmazingRibs.com, Meathead is known as the site's Hedonism Evangelist and BBQ Whisperer. He is also the author of the New York Times Best Seller "Meathead, The Science of Great Barbecue and Grilling", named one of the "100 Best Cookbooks of All Time" by Southern Living.

 

High quality websites are expensive to run. If you help us, we’ll pay you back bigtime with an ad-free experience and a lot of freebies!

Millions come to AmazingRibs.com every month for high quality tested recipes, tips on technique, science, mythbusting, product reviews, and inspiration. But it is expensive to run a website with more than 2,000 pages and we don’t have a big corporate partner to subsidize us.

Our most important source of sustenance is people who join our Pitmaster Club. But please don’t think of it as a donation. Members get MANY great benefits. We block all third-party ads, we give members free ebooks, magazines, interviews, webinars, more recipes, a monthly sweepstakes with prizes worth up to $2,000, discounts on products, and best of all a community of like-minded cooks free of flame wars. Click below to see all the benefits, take a free 30 day trial, and help keep this site alive.


Post comments and questions below

grouchy?

1) Please try the search box at the top of every page before you ask for help.

2) Try to post your question to the appropriate page.

3) Tell us everything we need to know to help such as the type of cooker and thermometer. Dial thermometers are often off by as much as 50°F so if you are not using a good digital thermometer we probably can’t help you with time and temp questions. Please read this article about thermometers.

4) If you are a member of the Pitmaster Club, your comments login is probably different.

5) Posts with links in them may not appear immediately.

Moderators

  Max

Click to comment or ask a question...

Spotlight

These are not paid ads, they are a curated selection of products we love.

All of the products below have been tested and are highly recommended. Click here to read more about our review process.

Use Our Links To Help Keep Us Alive

Many merchants pay us a small referral fee when you click our “buy now” links. This has zero impact on the price you pay but helps support the site.