A question for hot sauce lovers
MarshallLuke
Posts: 177 Member
I'm the kind of person who believes every meal can can be improved my hot sauce. I have tried many different kinds of hot sauce, been to stores that specifically sell hot sauce and am growing my own hot peppers.
Here is the problem: Most hot sauces are hot peppers and a TON of salt. I have high blood pressure and am trying to keep my sodium levels low. Does anyone know of hot sauces that are low in sodium or sodium free? The only one I have found so far is Ca John's Vicious Viper sauce. Only problem with that one is that it is 2 million scovile (for those not familiar with the scoville scale, the average jalapeno is about 8,000 scoville). So, hopefully someone out here knows about a hot sauce that is low sodium and doesn't leave my mouth burning for hours.
Here is the problem: Most hot sauces are hot peppers and a TON of salt. I have high blood pressure and am trying to keep my sodium levels low. Does anyone know of hot sauces that are low in sodium or sodium free? The only one I have found so far is Ca John's Vicious Viper sauce. Only problem with that one is that it is 2 million scovile (for those not familiar with the scoville scale, the average jalapeno is about 8,000 scoville). So, hopefully someone out here knows about a hot sauce that is low sodium and doesn't leave my mouth burning for hours.
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Replies
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I don't know of a sauce that fit's the bill, but you could make one with the peppers you're growing. I usually just dry and grind my hot peppers for later use. I think you'd just add vinegar (and other seasonings) and viola!0
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I also LOVE hot sauce but am avoiding excess sodium. There is a website, firegirl.com, that actually has good sauces that are lower sodium. Hope this helps0
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I absolutly LOVE hot sauce & I eat it on almost everything. Texas Pete's Hotter sauce is what I use. It only has like 105 mg of sodium per teaspoon. Of all the hot sauces I've used, that has the lowest amount of salt. It's super hot, a tsp is all I ever use & sometimes I only use 1/2 a tsp.0
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You could try blending hot peppers with a little greek yogurt. : )0
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I will ask my step son. he has quit the collection. We love Blair's Death Sauce but i have no idea about the sodium.0
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I don't know the sodium content on any of these, but I think the hot sauces from W.O. Hesperus (eatmeimhot.com) are astonishingly good, and there's lots of variety.
My beloved Tuong Ot Sriracha (the sriracha chili sauce by Huy Fong Foods with the rooster on the bottle and the green cap) lists 1 tsp as having 5 calories and 100mg sodium. There's 1 carb. This really adds a lot of variety to, well, everything.0 -
If you're making your own can you try using sea salt and then decrease the amount of salt in the recipe? Don't know if that would make a difference, but that's the first thing that came to mind.0
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Thanks all!
And Larius, trust me, I will be making my own hot sauce once my peppers are ready. It is what I bought them for, actually.0 -
I would think that if you are making your own, you will be able to control how much sodium is actually in it.0
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My husband is the same way... think cayanne in swedish meatballs, fettucini alfredo or tater tot hotdish (can you tell he's from WI?? LOL)
But that leads me to my point... Why not just use powdered cayanne pepper?
Or, make your own...http://www.hotsaucerecipe.net/ says most hot sauce is peppers, vinegar, onions, garlic, tomato sauce, looked up a coupla recipes quick and they seem really easy... the salt in commercial stuff is probably used as a preservative cuz most hot sauces don't get refrigerated.0 -
that's a good question. I'm also a hot sauce lover. I used to have high blood pressure but I never gave up my hot sauce. Just couldn't do it. I think even if you made your own the salt would still be there for it to be good. When I started working out more my blood pressure went down and I'm off of my pills. I watch the salt intake with other foods and use NoSalt on my foods but still get my hot sauce in.0
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Cholulo is 85mg/Tbs not to hot either. I love spicy stuff too.0
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We make our own, but it's not vinegary at all. We just soak the dried red chili pods until they are soft, throw them in a blender with a little water, about a T. of chopped garlic and about a teaspoon of salt, blend, then strain to get rid of the extra bits and seeds, and you end up with about 3 cups of chili sauce. Hubby is from NM and we get about 40 pounds of fresh green chili and a big box of dried red chili every year.0
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Although I enjoy hotter sauces, good old fashioned Tobasco Original only have 35mg/tsp. That is better than the other sauces I have. I intend to make my own this year with the peppers we have in our garden.0
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Tabasco has only 35 calories per teaspoon which is the lowest of the hot sauce.0
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I use Cholula original, although I wish it was spicier - 85mg per serving.0
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A teaspoon of salt in your receipe adds over 4000 mg of sodium to the 3 cups, that is quite a bit of sodium for people watching their sodium level.0
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Take vinegar and soak a bunch of hot peppers in it. Then just pour it on when you need it.
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