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Every day table sauce

Hey y'all, been a while since I made a sauce. Can't make the stuff when mrs. blues is around but it so happens that she's out of town. Lucky me.

One of my favorite hot sauces ever is The Cheech Mango Mojo. Loads of fruity flavor and is excellent on everything. I'm not a fan of hab sauces that have that overwhelming chalky/milky after taste that so many hab sauces have and thats one of the reasons I like it but that can be attributed to the fact that there is hardly any hab in it and thusly has almost no heat whatsoever. The other downside is that I have a mild allergic reaction sometimes to mangos. Turns out mangos have a particular enzyme, most notably in the skin, that is closely related to some of the same enzymes found in poison ivy and poison oak that cause irritation. Plah!

When you gotta' have it you gotta' have it. So the trick is to make a Cheech style hot sauce that actually can be called hot but without too much mango. I reckoned I could still use habs but would also cut down on some of the milky/chalky factor by bringing in some dry tasting chiles like pequins and arbols. I think I might have a winner!

Most here know me well enough to know that I seldom measure anything unless I'm baking. I just started tossing stuff into a pot and adjusted to taste as I went. Here's what I used.

2 ripe mangos
shredded carrots
fresh orange habanero
dried chile del arbol
dried pequin
yellow onion
kosher salt
apple cider vinegar
white sugar

First I steeped the dried chiles in the vinegar to rehydrate them and then tossed all the kids in the pool together with just enough water to cover and brought everything to a boil, then reduced the heat to a simmer.

Purty ain't it?

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Simmered for about an hour and then brought out the boat motor.

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At this point the sauce is still rather thin. Thickening agents are all cool and the gang but opted to simply reduce the sauce and let the fruit and carrot hold everything together. I reckoned I reduced it in total by half.

Just look at that color! LOOK AT IT!!!

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So how does it taste? Surprisingly the heat is about a 5 on a 1-10 scale. Fruity but only slightly sweet. I can taste just a hint of the milky/chalky taste of the hab and just a hint of smoke from the pequins. The arbols didn't really add anything other than color so might opt to leave them out next time. Overall this is a sauce that I reckon I can put on everything and taste good. I especially like to be liking it on mac & cheese, eggs and potatos, and tacos.

I had some store bought pre-breaded little shrimps in the freezer I keep around for "emergency purposes". I also had some Central Market fresh flour tortillas I was just looking for an excuse to use. These babies are made with butter not lard, and I gotta say when you open the package some pretty awesome buttery aromas fill the kitchen. They taste very buttery, savory, and succulent.

Baked the shrimps, cut some cabbage, splooged it with the hot sauce and a little baja creme sauce.

Boom! Bam! Pow!

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This stuff was without a doubt hot blue & righteous!
 
You had me at mac-cheese, eggs and potato tacos.

boom boom POW!

Great looking sauce Amigo. Why not makey the sauce when Mrs. blues is home?
Too much AWESOME for her to handle?
 
mrs. blues no like to be liking the noxious chile fumes coming from the stove top. Just last week I was cooking a veggie stir fry with a couple t-scorps I got from AJ. She was down the hall from the kitchen in her office and got all pissy when the fumes hit her. She said her eyes and nose were burning and she was having a sneezing fit. I really didn't notice the fumes so much but I sure felt it when I ate the veggies. The 2 scorps even chopped up and cooked down were incredibly hot and more pain than I care to eat. I split the veggies between 3 tacos and only got through 2. Long story short, I am not allowed to cook up hot stuff when mrs. blues is around else she's going to go jihad on me Lorena Bobbit style.
 
TB, sauce be lookin good compadre! You'll have topost back up in a week or so and let us know how the flavor is after all them ingredients have gotten all happy together.

I know what you mean about the wife. RocketLady has place a rule that all sauces involving anything more than a Jalapeno be cooked on the burner on the grill. Lucky me I got a new grill out of that rule :)
 
Looks absolutely fantabulous, TB. I find I have to be extra-careful when using AJ's TScorp or 7-Pot purees, or no one else here will eat what I make. Just a tad goes a long way, and even then it's too hot for some.
 
Thanks y'all. I just went and tried the sauce. Its really mellowed out over night more than I had hoped. I'd say the heat today is more like a 3.5 on a 1-10. Still pretty tasty and light years ahead heat wise over The Cheech style I was going after.

G, the hottest stuff I've ever eaten were AJ's t-scorp pods and puree. When I brought the scorps home and shown them to mrs. blues she reacted like I was holding a small hive of African killer bees! She was unthrilled to say the least and she let out an expletive filled warning to get that crap away from her or else!
 
Now, I have to ask as a rookie thinking about making something similar....how long will one of those bottles last in the fridge? Is it the vinegar that keeps it from going all nasty? Looks to me the key point is getting everything to a boil for a bit. The wife is out of town this weekend, so I was going to try this with whatever peppers Central Market has out there.
 
TB, there's a nifty little product put out by the nice lady at Texas Creek.
It's called Pure Evil. Designed to put a heat level where you want it without changing the flavor.
Ever heard of it? Lol

GET YO BADSEF SOME!
 
Thats a good question Chewi but I honestly can't tell you. This batch will most likely be eaten and gone in a month even though I will still use a lot of other hot sauce's along the way. A bottle of this stuff might last me 2 maybe 3 days if thats the only sauce I use. I typically go through about 3 bottles of whatever sauce in a week.

Were I to guess, unopened in the fridge it should last at least a couple of months.

I was very disappointed at CM in Plano the other day. All they had for fresh chile's were past their prime corked Mexican 'peno's, some anaheims, some orange habs, serranos, and fresnos. None looked in any great shape. I was really looking for some fresh thai's, cayenne's, and or tabasco. Nope. Last year they had some fresh red and green pequin's in 1 pound bags. I was flush with pequin's at the time so passed them up. Wish I had bought and frozen them now.

Scovie, muchas gracias for the tip about SL but if I have to add heat from another source after the fact, then I might as well throw it out as I consider that a big fat FAIL!
 
No! No! No FAIL! Just tweaking. That stuff is too beautiful to throw out, (not that are going to).
Just a couple drops of P.E. can be worth a try to save your hours of labor, and waiting for another opportunity for Mrs. B to be gone. Lol

I will personally gift you some if you PM me your addy.
 
Hmm, I'm willing to bet the same truck brings the chile's to both locations. Crap. I wonder if Whole Foods would have anything? I haven't been to one of those before. Anyway thats what I was thinking about the sauce. It wouldn't last me any longer than that so I'm good. Heading over to the hot sauce 101 thread to get a little edumacations to be on the safe side.

Hmm just double checked, no garlic in that pot? Wonder if that would be good/not good?
 
Much obliged for the offer Scovie but at the moment I am over run with hot sauce. I'll just double up on the heat next time. RM brought up an interesting fact I find pertinent and that the sugars in the sauce tend to rob the heat. I have experienced this phenomenon before and reckon it to be true.

On another note, as I mentioned being over run with hot stuff, dig this! I got this stuff from CM the other day.

Pickled Chiltepins!! How awesome is that? Can't wait to try 'em.

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Hey TB, to me a fruit/carrot sauce is not an every day table sauce, more of a specialty sauce. An every day sauce to me is pepper based with minimal ingredients.

But that's just a critique of the title... the sauce be slammin'.
 
THP, I reckon you are correct in the labeling. Generally, I gravitate to the sweet style of hot sauces for my own every day use. Dry style sauce's for instance, Crystal's, I use on oysters and sardines exclusively and I also prefer a dry style on pizza. The sweeter style's I dig for beef and fish stuff and of course, tacos and burgers.

Chewi, garlic would be good in this stuff too and normally I would have thrown some in but Mr.Tequila was driving the hot sauce wagon last night.
 
Hey TB,

Don't like the CM offerings, just look up your closest Fiesta Mart!!

I am NEVER disappointed here in Austin...

http://fiestamart.com/html/locations/dfw/index.shtml

Oh, and great sounding/looking sauce, man. I like me some sweet on my sustenance now and then.
 
The Fiesta Mart was my second stop after CM. All they had were jala's and serrano's. I did buy some dried arbols, pequins, ancho, and cascabel's from them. Even got a tin of achiote paste. They had a great little taco stand inside the store but it seems every time I want to try their tacos I'm in a hurry and on a mission.

In another month, Fiesta and CM should be loaded up with fresh chile's I reckon.
 
The Fiesta Mart was my second stop after CM. All they had were jala's and serrano's. I did buy some dried arbols, pequins, ancho, and cascabel's from them. Even got a tin of achiote paste. They had a great little taco stand inside the store but it seems every time I want to try their tacos I'm in a hurry and on a mission.

In another month, Fiesta and CM should be loaded up with fresh chile's I reckon.

Interesting. Obviously every store is supplied differently, but everytime I visit our southside store, they are chock full of the usuals, but also have red jals, rocotos, arboles, habs, cubanelles, anchos, and sometimes some other random stuff. And, of course, the dried chiles.

They're also the only place in town I can find fresh chickpeas/garbanzos, tunas, etc., etc., etc.
 
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