A Guide to Hot Sauces
By habee
hot sauces, hottest hot sauces, capsaicin
Hot sauce is a normal part of eating at our house, especially with BBQ cooking. Of course, we have our favorite hot sauces. They range from warm and tangy to inferno. Some people like hot sauce that’s incredibly hot – maybe even painful. I don’t usually care for these, unless they’re added sparingly to foods. I like some heat, but I don’t want the hot sauce to be so hot that all you taste is the fires of hell. I want it to enhance the flavor of the food I’m using it on, without overpowering and obliterating the actual taste of the dish. I know several folks, however, who think “the hotter, the better.” For some reason, the people I know who follow this philosophy are all male. I had a pal and fellow teacher from Canada a few years back who was like that. He and my husband got into kind of a contest to see which one could stomach the hottest hot sauces. They exchanged bottles of hot sauce and different hot sauces for months.
How is hot sauce made?
Hot sauces can be made from a variety of ingredients. The heat usually comes from chili peppers, including cayenne, Scotch bonnet, habanero, jalapeno, Tabasco, poblano, ancho, Serrano, Anaheim, and Thai peppers. All of these contain capsaicin, the chemical responsible for making peppers hot. The peppers might be ground or powdered and added to the pulp of vegetables or fruits to make hot sauce. Other popular ingredients in hot sauces are vinegar, beer, oil, and bourbon or other alcohols. Most hot sauces also contain water. To make hot sauces even hotter, sometimes pure capsaicin is added.
About capsaicin and health
In the past decade or so, researchers and scientists have begun to realize the possible healthy benefits of capsaicin. Because of the way the substance interacts with neurons that act as pain transmitters, capsaicin has the ability to block some types of pain.
You’ve probably experienced the head-clearing properties of capsaicin. The heat breaks up nasal congestion and can help with the symptoms of sinus-related allergies.
Studies in the U.S., England, China, and Japan all suggest that capsaicin might have the ability to cause cell death in certain types of cancers, including lung cancer, leukemia, and prostate cancer.
Capsaicin has long been the key ingredient in ointments and creams used on the skin, and now it’s also used in dermal patches and bandages to help relieve the pain of arthritis, muscle strain, fibromyalgia, sprains, and peripheral neuropathies like shingles. It’s also being tested as in injectable pain reliever.
Capsaicin also increases your metabolism, while decreasing triglyceride levels and LDL (bad) cholesterol. Since it might also help dissolve the fibrin that allows blood clots to form, capsaicin might be a key to decreasing the chance of stroke and heart attack.
Hot sauces around the world
In the United States, hot sauces are used in a variety of regional dishes. It’s a popular ingredient found in Cajun foods, Southwestern cuisine, and barbecue sauce. Here in the Deep South, many people add hot sauce to just about everything – pork rinds, rice, fried chicken, barbecue sauce, vegetables, etc.
On the islands of the Caribbean, hot sauces are usually made of vinegar, fruits, and vegetables, to which Scotch bonnet or habanero peppers are added. The resulting hot sauces are intensely hot – much hotter than tradition hot sauces found in the U.S.
Many people consider Mexican food to be very hot and spicy, but when compared to the cuisines of some other countries, Mexican hot sauces are only moderately hot. Milder sauces are also popular in Mexico, often made from chipotle peppers, which impart a smoky flavor.
In Puerto Rico, Spain, and the Philippines, adobo sauce is popular. Depending on the region, it might include vinegar, tomatoes, pork, olive oil, garlic, onion, lemon juice, orange juice, lime juice, oregano, and/or cumin, along with chipotles or other peppers.
In some African regions, hot sauces are used extensively. Most are made from the bird’s eye chili, which produces an interesting delayed reaction in consumers. Foods flavored with this sauce don’t taste hot until after the consumer eats it.
Some of the hottest hot sauces can be found in India, where the Naga Jolokia chili pepper is used. In the U.S., these peppers are often referred as "ghost peppers." According to the Guinness Book of World Records, this is the hottest pepper on the globe and is responsible for the hottest hot sauces. It’s more than 400 times hotter than Tabasco sauce!
Hot sauces are popular in Asian cuisines, too. Our Japanese pals often used chili oil on fish and in soups. In China, hot sauces are often made from soybean paste and dried or pickled chili peppers. The people of Thailand traditionally eat chili peppers with just about everything, and they use pepper sauce in fish sauces and as dipping sauces.
The hottest hot sauces and the Scoville Scale
How do you know how hot a hot sauce is before you buy it? Well, some indicate their hotness on the label. If not, the name of the individual hot sauce might give you a clue. For example, I’ve seen one called “Hot Sauce from Hell,” and another called “Devil’s Revenge.” With a name like that, you should be tipped off as to the contents of the bottle.
Otherwise, look at the ingredients to see which chili peppers were used in the sauce. The hotness of chili peppers is measured in Scoville Heat Units, according to how much capsaicin is present. The higher the number on the Scoville Scale, the hotter the pepper.
Here are a few examples, just to help you understand the scale and how it works:
Pure capsaicin – up to 16,000,000 heat units
Pepper spray used by police – 5,000,000 units
Naga Jolokia and Naga Viper peppers – about 1,000,000 units
Red Savina habanero pepper – around 450,000 units
Scotch bonnet pepper – about 250,000 units
Cayenne and Tabasco peppers – 40,000 units, on average
Jalapeno pepper – average around 5,000 units
Poblano and Anaheim peppers – range from 500 to over 2,000 units
Pimento pepper – around 300 units, on average
Spice up your food with hot sauces!
If you haven’t yet ventured into the world of chili peppers and hot sauces, give ‘em a try! If you’re not accustomed to eating hot, spicy foods, you’ll probably want to start out with a mild sauce and gradually work your way up. You’ll probably develop a taste preference for specific chili peppers and individual sauces. You might find yourself moving up the scale to the hottest hot sauces on the market! If you begin to emit flames from your tongue, don’t drink water to extinguish the fire. Instead, drink milk or eat a spoonful of sour cream. Below you’ll find a wide selection of bottled hot sauce, including some of the hottest hot sauces available.
Buy hot sauces and hottest hot sauces:
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Comments
Well written hub but I personally don't like hot sauces.
We love hot sauces, not the death variety but with some heat, great in winter when feeling a cold coming on.
Habee, Nice hub! Great information on the various hot sauces! Thank You for sharing, Peace & Blessings!
Love hot sauce, but when I see a skull on the jar, I run!
Loved this hot sauce guide, Holle, but the labels on those two bottles you illustrated are frightening. I like my hot sauce of the medium hot variety.
I love hot sauces. I've tried habernero and it's really hot--roof-hitting kind of hot. Anyway, I must always have some kind of hot sauces with my meal. More often, I make mine with chopped Thai chillies, lemon juice and Fish sauce--it makes everything I eat taste 10 times better. rated up.
Wow...this makes me want to shop for something extra hot on my next trip to the store! lol I will have to try one you have listed here.
Kristine, I love their sense of humor - don't you?? lol
Thanks, HH. I know hot sauces aren't for everyone!
Bob, I have to agree with you. I like some heat - but not a blistered tongue! lol
Hi, Deb! Great to see you!
Bpop - lol! Do you eat hot sauce on your breakfast eggs?
Drbj, I like medium-hot, too. I don't want the hot sauces to be so hot that you can't taste anything else.
Anglnwu, sounds great! Maybe you should bottle and sell it.
Herbi, writing the hub had the same effect on me! lol
I use hot spices and sauces all the time in my cooking. I am one of those guys you mentioned with , "the hotter the better."
I enjoy the sensation all over from the heat of a very, very hot sauce.
I looked at your list of sauces and I have a suggestion to add. Mazetta makes two types of a habanero sauce. They are the California Habanero Sauce and the Twist-n-Shout habanero sauce. I love them both.
I will use one side of my hamburger bun for the habanero sauce to add that extra "kick" to a wonderful burger.
My motto is..."if I don't pour sweat at first bite, then it ain't hot enough!"


Kristine Manley 15 months ago
I enjoyed this Hub, but especially enjoyed the photos of the sauces - "After Death Sauce: Feel Alive." LOL!