How to Make Hot Sauce, the A&B American Style Way (2024)

Now Fliman and Ballan were about to reveal the secrets of their sauce! Well, one of their sauces, anyway. Alongside their classic pepper sauce, they also produce a thicker "With Garlic" sauce and a "More Heat" variety that has five times the habaneros. Today's formula, however, was to be a seasonal specialty—the Fresnos, normally sourced from Florida, were instead grown on the rooftop of the nearby Brooklyn Grange farm, making this "NYC Rooftop" edition (as it's billed on the A&B website) essentially a locavore sauce. (Except that the Scotch Bonnets, which replaced habaneros, came from the Dominican Republic. Whatevs.) The secrets, meanwhile, were hardly secret.

As I watched intently, five workers staff shredded carrots, onions, and half the chiles (a mere 150+ pounds!), and heated them along with a ton of white vinegar in a 60-gallon vat while another worker puréed the mixture using an industrial stick blender. After an hour or two of very gentle simmering and puréeing, the sauce was smooth, crimson, and ready to be bottled. Boom, done.

Shredding time. Photo: Alex Lau

Naturally, it's not all that simple. There's a ton of things that Fliman and Ballan—childhood friends who grew up loving spicy food in northern New Jersey—considered as they developed their formula, from the type of chiles to the strength of the vinegar to how they wanted the sauce to be used. Fliman favors highly "versatile" sauces that can go with anything from eggs to steak to the base of a vinaigrette; some sauces on the market, however, have flavor profiles that are, well, more niche.

"I'm not going to add a mango purée to my eggs in the morning," Fliman said.

That said, Ballan—also 32, a former corporate bank strategist and former cook at Buddakan—broke all hot sauces down into four fundamentals:

1. Chiles This is perhaps the most important part: What kind of chiles do you like? Also, how do you figure out what kind of chiles you like? Well, you taste them, he said. You go to the supermarket or the farmers' market, buy a bunch of different kinds, from the familiar jalapeños and serranos to the weirder ones, and just try them. Nibble the tip, see how powerful they are and where the spice hits you (the tip of your tongue? the back of your throat?), and what other flavors they have. Then, once you know what you like, use those chiles.

Of course, it gets more complicated than that. You can roast or smoke chiles to alter their flavors or soften thick skins, which is particularly good for green chiles, since they tend to turn brown after being puréed. Cooking chiles mellows their heat, too; conversely, leaving them raw and including the ribs and seeds (but not the tough, bitter stems) gives you the full brunt of their power.

2. Acid Sure, you could just purée a ton of chiles and call that a sauce, but an acid is going to help draw out flavor, preserve the ingredients, and turn it into something you could truly call a sauce. A&B uses white vinegar at 5% (that strength helps them create the right pH needed for bottling, and it's actually pretty standard for grocery-store white vinegar), but if you're not concerned with FDA guidelines or creating a shelf-stable product, there are tons of other vinegars out there to play with. (I'm a big fan of the sweetness that apple cider vinegar brings.) Beyond vinegars, there are also citrus juices to add—but as Fliman noted, you shouldn't cook them. Either add them at the end to complement a vinegar or use them in a raw sauce.

3. Aromatics For some, aromatics such as carrots, onions, garlic, and ginger may be optional, but for A&B they contribute that garden-fresh flavor they're after. They also tend to require some cooking, both to bring out their sweetness and temper either their texture or their raw power.

4. Salt It's cooking, so there has to be salt. A&B uses kosher because... why? It's just what they've always used, Fliman said, and it's always worked. Good enough for me.

Alex Lau

The finished product. Photo: Alex Lau

These four categories may seem obvious, but I don't think I'd ever quite thought of hot-sauce-making in such an organized way. It made me notice, too, that Fliman had skipped over a potential fifth category: Extras—everything from fruits to oils to spices. And as I looked ahead to the hot-sauce experimentation that I'd be performing for the next installment of this series, I decided I'd attempt two varieties, one hewing closely to A&B's "American-style" principles ("bright, fresh flavors and honest, true ingredients," according to Fliman), the other building on them into something... well, I guess you'd call it Grosser. Tune in next week to see how it went!

How to Make Hot Sauce, the A&B American Style Way (2024)

FAQs

How to Make Hot Sauce, the A&B American Style Way? ›

To prepare the source, they shred the onions, carrots, and chile, and then heat them up alongside white vinegar while pureeing the sauce by use of an industrial stick blender. After about 1 to 2 hours of very gentle pureeing and simmering, the mixture becomes crimson, smooth, and ready for packaging.

What makes hot sauce Louisiana style? ›

The product is among hot sauces manufactured in the "Louisiana style," whereby cooked and ground chili peppers are combined with vinegar and salt, and then left to ferment during the aging process. In 2001, over 200,000 bottles of hot sauce were manufactured daily in various sizes.

What is the best hot sauce in the United States? ›

What is America's favorite hot sauce?
  • Frank's RedHot.
  • Cholula.
  • Tabasco.
  • Texas Pete.
  • Burman's.
  • Tapatio.
  • Louisiana Hot Sauce.
  • Huy Fong Sriracha.
Jan 22, 2024

What is the difference between Louisiana hot sauce and Mexican hot sauce? ›

Mexican-Style Sauces: Mexican hot sauces are smooth and typically made with a variety of peppers. Cholula, Valentina, and Tapatio are popular brands. Their consistency is thicker than that of Louisiana-style sauces. Although they are mostly not fermented, they are made in a similar style as American hot sauces.

What hot sauce do Southerners use? ›

“I cook with higher-acid sauces like Tabasco, Louisiana, and Crystal.” Toups agreed: “Cook with Crystal. It's sweeter, and it's a little calmer.” Modulating the heat level of a dish is one of the ways chefs use hot sauce when cooking, especially in place of powdered spices like cayenne.

What's the difference between Frank's Red hot sauce and Louisiana hot sauce? ›

Frank's, however, does things a little differently. The sauce contains garlic powder for an extra tone of spice and it uses water to remove much of the classic Louisiana vinegar zip, leaving more of the pepper flavor behind.

What vinegar to use for hot sauce? ›

White Vinegar

White vinegar in hot sauce is by far the common vinegar. Really, the most common in all of cooking. It's made from a grain alcohol similar to vodka, so it has the most neutral taste out of any vinegar. This makes it perfect as a foundation for other ingredients.

Did Louisiana hot sauce change their recipe? ›

A lot of things change over the better part of a century. We're not one of them. Since 1928, we've been using the same simple recipe to bring our fans a perfectly balanced taste of Louisiana.

What hot sauce do real Mexicans use? ›

Valentina. Ingredients: Water, chili peppers, vinegar, salt, spices, sodium benzoate. Story: Valentina is one of the most common hot sauces in Mexican taquerias and an easy go-to hot sauce with very simple ingredients and both a little heat and flavor.

What is the most popular hot sauce in Louisiana? ›

The Most Popular Hot Sauce in Every State
StateHot Sauce
IowaHuy Fong Sriracha
KansasSpanish Gardens
KentuckyFrank's RedHot
LouisianaTabasco
46 more rows
Feb 12, 2024

What hot sauce is similar to Louisiana? ›

Tabasco is a Louisiana-style hot sauce, which means that it — along with cousins like Crystal, Frank's Red Hot, and the aptly named Louisiana — is made up primarily of chilies, vinegar, and salt.

Which is hotter, Texas Pete or Franks? ›

Texas Pete hot sauce is 747 on the Scoville scale, making it hotter than Louisiana Hot Sauce and Frank's RedHot.

Is Tabasco a Louisiana-style hot sauce? ›

Edmund McIlhenny founded McIlhenny Co. in 1868 on Avery Island, Louisiana. "It was there that he developed the recipe for Tabasco Original Red Pepper Sauce that's been passed down from generation to generation," Osborn told Fox News Digital via email.

What is redneck sauce? ›

Ingredients: 3/4 cup Duke's mayonnaise. 3 Tablespoons ketchup. 5 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce* (1 Tablespoon + 2 teaspoons) 1 Tablespoon hot sauce.

What is America's favorite hot sauce? ›

Frank's RedHot is the flavor-packed favorite, followed by Choulula and Tabasco which round out the top three, according to purchase data on the total volume of each brand of hot sauce purchased from Instacart in each U.S. state from January 2023 through December 2023.

What is the spiciest sauce of all time? ›

The hottest hot sauce in the world is called Mad Dog 357 Plutonium No. 9 and comes in at 9 million Scoville Hotness Units (SHUs). This pepper extract is one of the hottest and purest in the entire world.

Are red rooster and Louisiana hot sauce the same? ›

What's the difference between Original Louisiana Hot Sauce and Red Rooster Hot Sauce? While both our Original Louisiana Hot Sauce and Red Rooster Hot Sauce products are from the same family of products, they both have a unique blend of peppers to provide them both with a distinct flavor.

What is the difference between Sriracha and Louisiana hot sauce? ›

Louisiana-style hot sauces, like Frank's Red Hot or Tabasco, are much thinner (runnier) than sriracha. They also tend to be quite vinegary and spicy, without any sweetness. These differences make it not the best substitute for sriracha.

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