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Title: Chile Sauce
Categories: Spice Condiment
Yield: 1 Servings

1 Text file

I made a really simple chile sauce last summer that now is my favorite seasoning for eggs, vegetables and main dishes. I make it a little thicker than you want (on the order of Pickapeppa or A1) but you could easily add more vinegar and water to resemble Tabasco.

What I did was take about 2 pounds of ripened Chile de Arbol peppers and wash and chop off the stems. Then chop them up coarsely and put in a stainless steel saucepan. Cover with a 50-50 mixture of vinegar and water and boil for 3-4 hours, adding more liquid as necessary. Make sure you have adequate ventilation: this combination will absolutely *stop* your respiration if you get more than a few minutes of it.

After you've boiled it, pour the whole mixture into a food processor or blender and puree. Cook it down to the thickness you want and put it in a bottle. Refrigerate.

The de Arbols give it a nice, small (but pungent) amount of heat and I think it tastes better than Tabasco sauce, especially on eggs. It's kept beautifully in my refrigerator. I imagine several other types of peppers would produce a nice sauce like this as well.

From the Chile-Heads Recipe Collection URL: http://chile.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu:8000/www/recipe.html

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