Sauce

Recs needed to lower spice level in hot sauce


I made my first hot sauce over the weekend—it’s a pineapple habanero hot sauce with peppers from my garden. I literally have no experience and kind of used a recipe I found online and then got creative with it by adding the pineapple.

My question: I was hoping for this to be cholula/tabasco level spicy where you can douse your food in it for a flavorful but more mild heat. It is more of a use-very-sparingly-for-your-own-safety level of spice. The flavor is good, but how do I tone down the spice? I know I need to add things to it, and I’ll probably end up with a lot of hot sauce, which isn’t a problem.

The recipe I used/elaborated on was basically habaneros, a little oil, apple cider vinegar, salt, pineapple, and honey. I removed the seeds from the habaneros before cooking.

by SourdoughBiscuits

41 Comments

  1. James_Fury34

    the problem i’ve found when using fresh peppers its hard to gauge how spicy it will be. i use the exact recipe for my salsa and it will vary from a 5 to a 10 on spice level

  2. DaleyLlama

    More vinegar. More water. More sugar or other fruit/veg. Can cool it down a bit, but sometimes that makes it less spicy and other times more spicy lol.

  3. M2_SLAM_I_Am

    You wanted mild heat but decided to make a habanero sauce?! I’m confused

  4. DonJohnson108

    Sugar can help balance the heat. I like agave nectar

  5. MrChicken23

    Habaneros are spicy. My first time making hot sauce I used too many habaneros and it was straight fire. Hotter than most reaper sauces I’ve had.

    How many peppers did you use? For a batch that small you probably only need half a pepper if you want it to be Tabasco level.

  6. No_Bottle_8910

    I have cut hot sauce heat down by adding sweet peppers to the mix, you can get bags of little yellow, orange, and reds at most grocery stores. They will add bulk without heat.

  7. Sekshual_Tyranosauce

    Make a second batch the same size but use only bell peppers or pablanos. Something mild and sweet. Then blend the two.

  8. Slow_Astronomer_3536

    Next batch add more pineapple and/or less habanero. You can also add some brown sugar to cut the heat a bit, but it’s better to use fresh ingredients whenever possible.

  9. Lots of good suggestions here, another idea is to add carrots to the sauce.

  10. Dunmer_Sanders

    Just suck it up. You’ll adapt. 🔥

  11. LettuceOpening9446

    Just a heads up. Tabasco peppers (in Tabasco) and arbol & piquin (in Cholula) are nowhere near as hot as habaneros. There are condiment types of hot sauces, and then there are HOT sauces.

  12. Combat_wombat605795

    Fermented carrots, sautéd onions, and or roasted bell/poblano peppers are my favorite way to reduce heat and add quantity. The fermentation and cooking is to add flavor and reduce the chunkiness of blending raw ingredients.

  13. GlowingDuck22

    How long do you plan on keeping it? I mix a lot of my hot sauces with sour cream (before serving). You could do it as you go so it keeps longer.

  14. D3moknight

    You can cook the peppers a bit, like sauté in a pan, or pickle them a bit before putting in the sauce. This will knock the heat down quite a bit.

  15. Distant_Yak

    Add more of everything besides the peppers. That’s what I do when salsa turns out too hot. Or too oniony or garlicy, more of everything besides what it has too much of.

  16. illegal_miles

    If you don’t want to change the flavor profile much then just adding more pineapple and vinegar (and probably salt to keep the salt balance) would be the simple solution (“the solution to pollution is dilution”).

    Carrots can also work, they will add some sweetness too. But the flavor will also change a bit.

    Just cutting with vinegar, water, and salt would be the way to make it more like a Tabasco or Louisiana type sauce. They start with pretty hot peppers but the vinegar dilutes them down to a milder heat.

  17. sprawlaholic

    Add a base pepper like bell peppers, Hungarian wax, poblano, or Anaheim.

  18. Disastrous-Resident5

    That looks and sounds like some drink-it-all-and-regret-life-2-hours-later sauce. Looks divine!!!

    But yes like someone said, puréed carrots is a good start.

  19. If you want a throw that shit on everything level of spice, use something like 1/2 or 1/4 the amount you used this time. If you look at the ingredients list on a lot of the milder habanero hot sauces, you’ll see that it can be pretty far down the list, past stuff like pineapple or onions sometimes.

  20. Federal_Oil7518

    I find that the fresh squeezed lemon or lime juice knocks the heat down considerably. Like to the point where I’ve kidna ruined a whole batch of super spicy saucy because I squeezed a whole lime into it.

  21. poopmangler

    Add a bit more honey and vinegar until it gets to the point you like, i personally find Tabasco vinegary… This is coming from a “carries the end suace in his poccet and uses it daily” person though

  22. johnnybmagic

    Sugar is the easiest way to reduce heat.

  23. gettogero

    Lots of fun ideas, but they will definitely change your flavor profile.

    Carrots add a LOT of sweetness. That’s the biggest complaint in yellowbird habanero.

    Other peppers, especially the non spicy ones like green peppers, will change it to a more salsa-like flavor.

    Add more of everything but the hots until it’s the flavor you like. You want more onion flavor? Add more onion. Want less onion flavor? Just skip the onion as you’re diluting it. Just keep going down that way and you’ll maintain a similar flavor without the heat

  24. InternalAd9247

    Try a bit of carrot and a yellow bell pepper. The carrot adds a lot of sugar, which will decrease heat; the yellow bell pepper will add a little sugar and help dilute but tends to be a mild flavor so it gets subsumed by the other flavors of the sauce

  25. Fl48Special

    Sugar is your friend either in the form of fruits / veggies with high content or pure sugar

  26. Zigglyjiggly

    Use a less spicy pepper than habañero.

  27. Habaneros are very spicy. You need to dillute the sauce. Add more pineapple and vinegar to add bulk to the sauce so the habanero is a smaller portion of it.

    Next time pick a less spicy pepper or use something else to add bulk to the sauce like carrot or onion, etc.

  28. AcrossDesigner

    I’ve found cooking it (in a very well ventilated area of course) can reduce the spice heat. Also use premero peppers next time, they’re related to habaneros but about 1/3 the heat so the flavor won’t change.

  29. Thatsmathedup

    My cousin used to make sauce with habanero. For most tastes it would work for 1 pepper per 4 jars. Add more pineapple until it splits?

  30. newoldschool

    increase volume

    maybe a mix of less hot peppers blended in

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