3 Words

3 Words: Make Hot Sauce

In less than 30 minutes, you can make your favorite bottled condiment with fresh chiles

Kerri Conan
Heated
Published in
3 min readOct 26, 2020

--

Chiles, scissors, and gloves on a cutting board.
Photos: Kerri Conan

Consider the barely identifiable action shot below as an invitation — rather, my imploration — to try your rubber-gloved hand at making hot sauce. I’ve been making it every year since before I first wrote about it for The New York Times. Besides the glove, all you need is a blender, a pound or so of fresh chiles, sea salt, and a quart of cider vinegar. And, oh yeah, a glass jar for when you’re done; play your cards right, and the vinegar bottle works perfectly.

A close-up of hot sauce in a blender.

My method — taught by my uncle-in-law, who settled near San Sebastian, Mexico, in the early 1960s — works for all varieties of chiles in any stage of ripeness. These are fully ripe cayennes, so pretty hot with a little fruity sweetness. I also love the grassiness of green sauce. Using whatever you like to eat is always a safe bet. It’s a pain to seed them; just trim the stem ends with scissors.

--

--

Heated
Heated

Published in Heated

Food from every angle: A publication from Medium x Mark Bittman

Kerri Conan
Kerri Conan

Written by Kerri Conan

Cookbook developer, longtime Mark Bittman colleague, home economics advocate.

Responses (1)