Might be a really hard question to answer... but in general, how does sauce ingredients affect heat level and what can you do to balance the heat?
The reason I'm asking is I made a hot sauce with watermelon and used habaneros(8) and 7pot bubblegum(3) and the heat level is way, way, way higher than I anticipated.
My previous sauce was based on mango and used only habanero(20) and I could eat that sauce all day without breaking a sweat.
I almost made twice as much of the watermelon sauce compared to the mango sauce, so in theory the watermelon should have been a lot more diluted(in terms of heat)
So I'm thinking that the heat level of a sauce is highly dependant on which ingredients you use, not just the peppers.
In my example above, a watermelon, although sweet, is mostly water. While a mango is sweet but has a lot of flesh and thick consistency... which made me think that perhaps the type of ingredient affects the heat level.
The reason I'm asking is I made a hot sauce with watermelon and used habaneros(8) and 7pot bubblegum(3) and the heat level is way, way, way higher than I anticipated.
My previous sauce was based on mango and used only habanero(20) and I could eat that sauce all day without breaking a sweat.
I almost made twice as much of the watermelon sauce compared to the mango sauce, so in theory the watermelon should have been a lot more diluted(in terms of heat)
So I'm thinking that the heat level of a sauce is highly dependant on which ingredients you use, not just the peppers.
In my example above, a watermelon, although sweet, is mostly water. While a mango is sweet but has a lot of flesh and thick consistency... which made me think that perhaps the type of ingredient affects the heat level.