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Monday, October 8, 2012

Bajan Pepper Sauce Gives Food the Right Caribbean Spice

Barbados is known to the outside world as the home of Mount Gay rum, excellent ability sugar, and the national dish, flying fish. But nearly every visitor to the island has encountered Bajan pepper sauce. It is a ubiquitous condiment commonly bottled in a glass flask or a plastic soda bottle. Bajans use pepper sauce on virtually everything, from fish to chicken to pork. It is without demand a flavor improving caress but to the uninitiated it can be Hot Hot Hot!

Hot peppers are measured by a recipe known as Scovil units. A green bell pepper, for instance, rates a zero; Tabasco sauce can range from 2500 to 5000 Scovil units. Bajan pepper sauce registers in the middle of 30,000 and 50,000 Scovil units or nearly 10 times the heat of "normal" hot sauce. The sauce isn't necessarily debilitating to the tongue but rather delivers a surge in body temperature---it packs "body heat."

Caribbean

The main ingredient in Bajan pepper sauce is mustard. The orange yellow color distinguishes it from other West Indian pepper sauces. While there are legitimately hundreds of recipes, the main ingredients are mustard, onions, white vinegar, garlic, salt, and the Scotch Bonnet pepper. Variations include adding thyme, cloves, radishes, sugar, and rum. Our personal favorite, Neville Edwards Pepper Sauce, contains 5% alcohol.

Bajan Pepper Sauce Gives Food the Right Caribbean Spice

Bajan pepper sauce provides a delightful kick to Bloody Mary's, enhances the flavor of chicken and fish, and provides a sure morning wake up call when whisked into scrambled eggs. Most locals and the informed traveler will order a hot dog from any of the petrol stations with pepper sauce and hyper chips (crushed potato chips)---please note that a Bajan hot dog comes with mayonnaise and parmesan cheese so indicate your preferences when production your order! And for the real adventurer, Saturdays in Barbados is a time for puddin' n souse, a don't-ask-what's-in-it local dish that simply must be eaten with pepper sauce.

There is a red version of Bajan pepper sauce known as corned peppers, a recipe of production pepper sauce handed down over the years from generation to generation. It involves mascerating or steeping peppers, seeds and stems, in oil for periods of up to a year before adding the blending ingredients. Scovil units can reach 75,000 to 90,000 on corned peppers production this condiment for professional hot pepper lovers only. When added to chili or stews, the corned pepper sauce transports the depth of flavor into other dimension.

Be sure to pick up a bottle or two to take back home for a fabulous souvenir from "we" island.

Bajan Pepper Sauce Gives Food the Right Caribbean Spice

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