Spices, spicey seasonings: what's your favorite?
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I put hot sauce on pretty much everything. Not Tabasco (so substandard when you've had a good hot sauce), but I put a good local hot sauce made from the aji chombo pepper (similar to habenero) that has more of a sweetness to the spice. No calories, and minimal sauce. It doesn't do anything for my metabolism, but it does help me with my weight loss because I can eat food that is bland and more calorie friendly, because the hot sauce makes it enjoyable.
I enjoy spicy foods when eating at restaurants but have limited myself preparing foods at home especially, as you said, with blander choices. Going to add the aji chombo pepper to my list. Thank you for sharing your advice.0 -
lancejohnston523 wrote: »Tabasco - Smoked Chipotle flavor is awesome. Great flavor
Sounds good! Thank you.0 -
HereToLose50 wrote: »Cayenne pepper for most things. I also like freshly chopped hot peppers mixed in things that normally ask for bell peppers and also some in chicken or tuna salad, etc. I even put them in salads sometimes depending on other ingredients I'm using at the time.
I eat a lot of spicy spices already mentioned by others also. Almost everything I eat is spicy.
I agree with whoever said not Tabasco sauce. The flavor is off to me. No other kinds of watery hot sauces either.
I like your idea with the bell pepper alternative. And, I agree there's nothing to like about dumping a watery sauce on your food. Definitely prefer thicker hot sauces.1 -
New Mexican chile - red or green.1
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I am a Trader Joe's spice and seasoning aisle stalker. I use their Everything But the Bagel, 21 Seasoning Salute, South African Smoke Seasoning and Chile Lime Seasoning Blend all the time. Plus the items are cheap and they have quite few to choose from.3
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Spices don't boost metabolism, but they can be used in place of butter or oils to add flavor. My personal favorite is cajun seasoning. Tastes great on poultry, fish, veggies, and eggs.1
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Oh and Dukkah, but since it’s generally based around hazelnuts, or sometimes other nuts and seeds, I have to be a bit less prolific with it than things like Tabasco, sadly. But I make some little chickpea flour crackers with dukkah pressed into the dough before baking, those are amazing as a real treat for me!1
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I am not a fan of heat but I love highly flavored foods. I love a dash of Aleppo pepper on many things (it has heat similar to jalapeno but has a bit of a citrus-ey flavor). I use a lot of cumin, paprika, and always freshly ground black pepper as spices. Herbs I use a lot are basil, oregano, tarragon, and chives (all fresh from my garden). The only seasoning I use is chili pepper but I do keep my own mix of whole black pepper, coriander, allspice, and Szechwan peppercorns in my second peppermill.
I mostly avoid prepared seasonings because so many have too much salt. I mix my own salt free taco seasoning and usually season my food with individual herbs and spices to taste.1 -
With "maybe" the exception of ice cream, sriracha sauce goes with everything!!
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Yellowbird Jalapeno condiment for a mild heat. Actually all their sauces are excellent.1
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Harissa and maple syrup roast carrots is a favourite of mine.
https://www.bonappetit.com/recipe/harissa-and-maple-roasted-carrots1 -
I don't have a favourite spice. It all depends on what I cook, really. I know I'd have problems without soysauce, fishsauce and fermented shrimp paste. But really, I love food from so many different regions and countries I could not chose for one.1
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This time of year I like Thai seasonings:
- Fish sauce
- Lime juice
- Hot pepper
There is often more depending on the recipe, but that is the holy trinity.1 -
Maesri brand Thai seafood sauce. I use it for dipping raw veg which taste amazing. Here is a recipe for a homemade version.
https://siamsizzles.com/thai-seafood-lovers-dipping-sauce/2 -
In a soup or a chili I like to layer - paprika, cayenne, pepper flakes.1
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Huge fan of smoked paprika. My husband found smoked pepercorns that we grind fresh, which is amazing. A sweet-tasting spice that compliments spicy food really well is Amchur, it’s basically a dried mango powder. Also, never underestimate cinnamon, it's more than just desserts.1
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Lately, gochujang chile paste. Sometimes I mix it with peanut butter powder and rice vinegar to make a calorie-manageable hot peanut sauce.
Pickapeppa sauce is also good (Jamaican, with the kind of flavor profile you'd expect, spicy, sweet, sour, and has notes of fruit, ginger, cloves, etc., as well as being spicy (there's an extra hot version, too)).
Hot yuzu sauces are tasty, too. (Yuzu is a sour citrus fruit. There are various sauces made with it, including ponzu; like many asian condiments, ponzu has fish ingredients, but not all yuzu sauces do. Trader Joe's has a hot yuzu sauce with just vinegar, yuzu, chili pepper and salt).
Hot spices burn no/negligible extra calories, but they're yummy and add variety to foods, so why not?2 -
I have a ton of spices in my cupboard.
Besides garlic and onion, I use a ton of turmeric, paprika, sumac, and red pepper flakes.
I also put hot sauce on many things.1 -
Sea Salt &/or Pepper (I'm boring)2
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