Home-Style Inner Beauty Hot Sauce               

 tags (edit): Easy @Vogel @Try Soon! Sauces  

 

This style of hot sauce, widely used in the West Indies, is basically habanero peppers (also known as Scotch Bonnets), fruit, and yellow mustard, with a few other ingredients thrown in. Use this recipe as a guideline. Habaneros are at the top of the chile pepper heat scale, so feel free to substitute other peppers of your choice.

Let your imagination run free as to what whopper you can lay on your guests regarding its origins. If you're having trouble, here's a start:

"One day in Jamaica I was in this dingy bar and met this old guy who..." and you take it from there.

Ingredients

12 each fresh habanero chiles roughly chopped
1 each ripe mango peeled, pitted, mashed
1 cup cheap yellow prepared mustard
1/4 cup brown sugar packed
1/4 cup white vinegar
1 tablespoon prepared curry powder
1 tablespoon ground cumin
1 tablespoon chili powder
salt and freshly cracked black pepper to taste


 

Instructions
Mix all the ingredients together and stand back. This will keep, covered and refrigerated, until the year 2018. Be careful, though: If it spills, it will eat a hole in your refrigerator. If you ever want to dispose of it, call the local toxic waste specialists.

WARNING: Hottest sauce in North America. Use this to enhance dull and boring food. Keep away from pets, open flames, unsupervised children, and bad advice. This is not a toy. This is serious. Stand up straight, sit right, and stop mumbling.

Be careful not to rub your nose, eyes, or mouth while working with habaneros. You may actually want to wear rubber gloves while chopping and mixing -- these babies are powerful.

Funnel the sauce into an old pint liquor bottle and store in the fridge.

This recipe published with BigOven, and can be imported instantly by BigOven users viewing this page. Download your free trial at www.bigoven.com.


Yields: 0
    
"Big Flavors Of The Hot Sun" by Chris Schlesinger

notes:  From: Big Flavors Of The Hot Sun by Chris Schlesinger and John Willoughby. ISBN 0-688-11842-9
http://myweb.cableone.net/howle/page/IBHOTSAU.HTM

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