| |

Fermented Mango Habanero Hot Sauce

Sweet and spicy with a healthy fermented, probiotic kick! You will put my Fermented Mango Habanero Hot Sauce on everything! 

Fermented Mango Habanero Hot Sauce

This is what happens when I have a couple extra mangos and fresh habaneros in the garden. Admittedly, I have a deep fear of hot peppers, not eating them but touching them. I learned my lesson the hard way….

Several years ago, I was innocently cleaning Hungarian Wax Peppers (a medium-hot pepper) with my bare hands. I did a bunch because we were canning them. This wasn’t any different from what I had done for years in the past.

But this time was totally different…. in a very bad way

I’m not talking about mistakenly touching my face with hot pepper hands like many people have experienced. The funniest thing happened a couple hour AFTER I was done cleaning peppers. Suddenly my hands started burning. Not the palms or finger tips where had the most contact with the peppers, but the backs of my hands.

When I say burning, I mean BURNING.

Like my hands were being pressed into hot coals and nothing would alleviate the pain. We tried every possible treatment… and I mean EVERY.

After several hours and several shots of liquor, with my hands coated in baking soda and milk, wrapped in aluminum foil and plastic baggies, dipped into a bucket of ice water, I passed out.It was well over 12 hours before I felt normal again. And I honestly learned my lesson and have never touched a hot pepper with my bare hands again.

So, let me remind you that hot peppers are dangerous and wear rubber gloves when handling them. There was no rhyme or reason why I got pepper burns, but I’m never risking it again.

Fermented Mango Habanero Hot Sauce

Making my Fermented Mango Hot Sauce is very easy, the only hard part is dealing with the habanero pepper. One last time, PLEASE don’t forget to wear gloves!

Remove the seeds from the pepper and coarsely chop, then blend everything together until smooth. Transfer to a glass jar and cover with cheesecloth or cotton towel and secure with a rubber band. Allow to ferment for 12 hours, then refrigerate until ready to use.

Fermented Mango Habanero Hot Sauce

Initially when it’s all blended together it will taste hotter than the finished sauce will be. Fermentation and chilling take away some of the heat.

We enjoy Fermented Mango Habanero Hot Sauce on pretty much everything, but on my Mexican Braised Beef Tacos, it’s simply amazing!

If you LOVE Mangos as much as I do, make sure you check out my Mango Black Bean Salsa, Easy Frozen Mango Margarita, Fermented Mango Habanero Hot Sauce, Homemade Mango Syrup, Spicy Mango Sauce and even Mango Iced Tea!

Yours in Health,

Hayley Ryczek

Fermented Mango Habanero Hot Sauce

Fermented Mango Habanero Hot Sauce

Print Pin Facebook
Servings: 3 cups

Ingredients

Instructions

  • Combine all ingredients and blend until completely smooth.
  • Transfer to a glass container, cover with cheesecloth secured with a string or rubber band. Allow to ferment at room temperature for 12 hours.
  • Refrigerate 12+ hours prior to serving. Will keep in the refrigerator for up to 6 months.

Notes

If you cannot use whey due to a dairy allergy, substitute vegetable based starter culture.
Tried this recipe?Mention @hayley_inthekitchen or tag #hayley_inthekitchen!

 

Similar Posts

13 Comments

    1. Fermentation times can me shorter or longer, but you’ll need to keep a close eye to make sure nothing funky happens. The taste will become stronger and more noticeable. If stored on the pantry it will ferment, refrigeration halts further fermentation.

    1. Have you tried a natural ferment? Not adding the whey, letting the peppers and mangos ferment at room temperature for a couple of weeks?

      1. wild fermentation are highly unpredictable. If you don’t want to use whey you can use a vegetable based culture to get the fermentation party started SAFELY and predictably.

    1. The bacteria that creates Kombucha aren’t technically the same family that we are trying to harness. I would not suggest it. Whey or the liquid from another vegetable ferment are my suggestions for this recipe.

  1. Hello!

    Very excited to try this recipe. This will be my first time fermenting a food group. I have done kombucha for a few months now and have enjoyed it. If I let the fermentation go for longer what would be the outcome? would it become more sour do to the acid build up?

    Thank you gain for the recipe and the great website!

    1. Fermenting time-frames are guides. There are factors (like ambient temperature) that will affect how fast or slow fermentation will occur. You can certainly extend the fermentation a little longer (with most vegetables) but will notice the flavor becoming stronger and ultimately not edible.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.