The Hot Sauce Cookbook: Hot Chili Eggs, Buffalo Wings, Sriracha Shrimp, Harissa Shawarma, and More!
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About this ebook
Addicted, obsessed, devoted. No meal is safe from a hot sauce addict. They’ve got it everywhere—in their fridge, in their pantry, even in their bag, swag! These 60 recipes are sure to satiate cravings at every mealtime. So, dive into this cookbook for fantastically fiery dishes including:
- Chili-fried eggs
- Hot Sauce Buffalo Wings
- Sriracha Buttered Shrimp
- Harissa Chicken Shawarma Wraps
- Crunchy Thai Salad
- Chili Chocolate Brownies
- Mexican Hot Chocolate
- And more!
Heather Thomas
Heather Thomas is a health and cookery writer and editor. She is the author of The Halloumi Cookbook, The Nut Butter Cookbook, The Avocado Cookbook and The Brussels Sprout Cookbook. Heather has worked with many top chefs, nutritionists and women’s health organisations and charities, and has contributed to health and food magazines in the UK and the United States.
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The Hot Sauce Cookbook - Heather Thomas
INTRODUCTION
Hot sauces are now increasingly popular as more and more people become interested in eating a more varied diet and exploring different world cuisines. Consequently, new types of hot sauces are emerging all the time and there are literally hundreds available, if you include all the regional and artisanal brands as well as the ubiquitous well-known ones.
Hot chili-based sauces have always played a starring role in Asian, Mexican, Caribbean and Middle Eastern cooking, but now that our taste buds are developing a hankering for spice, they are featuring more prominently in traditional Western dishes, too, as well as being used as a condiment. In the United States, these sauces have such popularity that there are even hot sauce festivals that attract thousands of aficionados, who gather to taste the latest varieties and discover new brands. Once a fringe ethnic food, hot sauces are now hitting the mainstream and most of us have at least one bottle in our kitchen cupboard.
THE BASIC INGREDIENTS
Hot sauces vary in their flavor, color, texture and intensity of heat, depending on which chili peppers are used to make them and how they are combined with other ingredients. However, they all contain three essential elements: chilies, vinegar and salt. Sugar, spices, herbs, garlic, tomatoes, vegetables and thickening agents may be added to this holy trinity. Flavorings and colorings are sometimes exotic, as in the case of rose harissa, which incorporates crushed rose petals and rose water.
AROUND THE WORLD
This book celebrates the diversity of hot sauces, capturing the flavors and cultures of their countries of origin. The recipes feature fiery crimson harissa paste from the Levant and North Africa, Thai sweet chili and Sriracha sauces, West Indian hot pepper sauces, Jamaican jerk sauce, Portuguese and southern African piri piri sauce, South American aji, Mexican Cholula, jalapeño and smoky chipotle chili sauces, Indonesian sambal oelek, Chinese Szechuan spicy plum sauce and Japanese wasabi, as well as red and green Tabasco from America.
Sriracha is a good example of a hot sauce that has taken off from its humble beginnings in a Thai seaside village to become a global phenomenon. The spread of street food stalls and markets and food and music festivals, as well as the new breed of food bloggers, have helped hot sauces go viral and develop a cult following. Like many other hot sauces that are now mainstream, the appeal of Sriracha lies in its versatility. It has reached out from being solely a condiment in Thai and Vietnamese restaurants to flavoring cookies, cakes and desserts as well as savory dishes.
RECIPES
In this book we have recipes for hot sauces that you can make from scratch at home, ranging from tomato chili jam for enhancing cheese and cold meats to unusual variations on harissa, including rose harissa and a green version flavored with herbs. You can learn how easy it is to cook your own sweet chili sauce or even Sriracha, and you’ll also find hot and spicy salad dressings, salsas, dipping sauces and marinades.
The delicious recipes feature snacks, desserts and drinks as well as breakfasts and brunches, salads and supper dishes. There are old favorites as well as some exciting and innovative dishes from around the world, including Jamaican jerk chicken and stamp and go
fritters, Mexican burritos, harissa chicken shawarma wraps and a Peruvian quinoa brunch with aji.
THE APPEAL OF HOT SAUCE
Hot sauces are more than just a food
; they reveal how cultures can fuse and connect. Even though countries in different parts of the world have their own interpretations, we can all relate to the basic ingredients of chilies, salt and vinegar. There’s something very personal, pleasurable and almost spiritual about these three elements—they can transform our mood as well as our palate. So whether you want to just add heat to a soup or spice up a cake or loaf of bread, our hot sauce recipes will show you how.
HOMEMADE HOT SAUCES
Hot dipping sauces
Mexican hot sauce
Sweet Thai chili sauce
Homemade fermented Sriracha
Quick sauces
Harissa
Green harissa
Szechuan hot plum sauce
Tomato chili jam
West Indian hot pepper sauce
HOT DIPPING SAUCES
Use these sweet and spicy hot sauces for dipping spring rolls, wontons, dim-sum and appetizers, or drizzle them over crabcakes or rice and noodles. They will stimulate your taste buds and enhance your meal.
THAI DIPPING SAUCE
MAKES: APPROX. 60ML/2FL OZ (¼ CUP) PREP: 5 MINUTES
2 tbsp water
1 tbsp caster (superfine) sugar
2 tbsp nam pla (Thai fish sauce)
juice of 1 lime
2 fresh red bird’s eye chilies, thinly sliced
2 spring onions (scallions), finely sliced
1Put the water and sugar in a bowl and stir until the sugar dissolves.
2Stir in the remaining ingredients and then transfer to a serving bowl.
OR YOU CAN TRY THIS…
–Add a little chopped cilantro.
–Add some diced cucumber or shredded carrot.
–Add ½ stalk lemongrass, outer peel removed and finely diced.
VIETNAMESE NUOC CHAM
MAKES: APPROX. 150ML/5FL OZ (²/³ CUP) PREP: 10 MINUTES | COOK: 5 MINUTES
4 tbsp water
2 tbsp rice vinegar
2 tbsp nam pla (Thai fish sauce)
3 tbsp white sugar, preferably caster (superfine)
1 small carrot, peeled and cut into thin shreds
grated zest and juice of 1 small lime
1 garlic clove, crushed
1 tsp light soy sauce
handful of cilantro, finely chopped
2 fresh red chilies, finely diced
1Put the water, rice vinegar, nam pla and sugar in a small saucepan. Set over a medium heat and stir until the sugar dissolves.
2Bring to the boil, then remove the pan from the heat and stir in the carrot. Set aside to cool.
3When the sauce is cool, stir in the lime zest and juice, garlic, soy sauce, cilantro and chilies. Transfer to a small bowl before serving.
OR YOU CAN TRY THIS…
–Add some grated fresh root ginger.
–Stir in some finely sliced spring onion (scallion).
MEXICAN HOT SAUCE
MAKES: APPROX. 240ML/8FL OZ (1 CUP) | PREP: 15 MINUTES | STAND: 2—6 DAYS
225g/8oz fresh green or red jalapeño chilies, halved
1 tsp sea salt crystals
150ml/5fl oz (⅔ cup) white vinegar
2 garlic cloves, crushed
1 tsp soft light brown sugar
To make an authentic-tasting Mexican sauce you need to use the right chilies. You can now buy fresh or dried jalapeño, ancho, Serrano, guajillo, habanero and poblano chilies, plus many other varieties, online or by mail order as well as from some supermarkets and specialist stores. You can adjust the number of chilies used in these recipes according to how much heat you like. Serve these sauces with tacos, burritos, enchiladas, tamales or fajitas, or simply drizzle over some chili-fried eggs and sliced avocado.
1Put the chilies and salt in a food processor or chopper and blitz briefly to a paste.
2Transfer to a large clean screwtop jar or a Mason glass jar. Seal with the lid and set aside overnight or for 12 hours at room temperature. The chilies will start to ferment.
3Add the vinegar and give everything a good stir. Seal with the lid and leave at room temperature for at least 24 hours. For a really intense taste, you can leave it for longer—up to 5 days.
4Transfer to a blender or food processor and add the garlic and sugar. Blitz until smooth and then pass through a fine sieve, pressing down with a spoon, into a bowl below.
5Decant into a sterilized 250ml/8fl oz jar or bottle (see tip below). You can eat it straight away and store in the fridge for up to 3 months.
TIP: Wash
