Keeping Hot Sauce From Separating

Keeping Hot Sauce From Separating - Appetizing chicken meat on plate

Last fall I tried my hand at making a homemade hot sauce. Essentially: roast peppers, blend with vinegar, garlic, salt and other spices, put in jar for three weeks, strain and you have hot sauce.

The sauce was great, but after about a week of sitting in a jar in my fridge it separated and became rather unsightly. Of course, after shaking it up it returned to normal. Is there a way to keep a sauce like this from separating?

Thanks!



Best Answer

Whenever you see a sauce separate, it's because you have an Emulsion, which is two or more immiscible liquids. In cooking, these liquids are typically water and fat.

To stabilize an emulsion, you use an emulsifier. The most common food emulsifier is lecithin, and the most common natural source of lecithin is egg yolk. If you don't want the taste of egg or your food is not going to be cooked (i.e. a vinaigrette), then it you can actually go out and buy pure lecithin (soy lecithin is common to find).

As the wikipedia entry mentions, there are other natural emulsifiers such as honey and mustard, and often when you see recipes calling for mustard when it seems to be a strange ingredient to add (such as cheese sauce), the reason is to help stabilize the emulsion.

Additionally, the most common emulsifier used in packaged or processed foods is sodium stearoyl lactylate. It sounds scarier than it is; you can buy it in the store just like lecithin.




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How do you keep hot sauce from separating?

There are many ways of stabilizing an emulsion or a particle solution, but the easiest is to slightly thicken the mixture with a thickening agent. Large, processed food companies use a combination of different thickeners based on the ingredients in the emulsion, but for home cooks xanthan gum is a great place to start.

How do you keep buffalo sauce from separating?

My number 1 tip when making buffalo sauce is to keep the heat low and continually stir. If you notice the sauce starts to split, immediately take the pan off the heat and keep stirring until it comes together.

How do you stabilize homemade hot sauce?

Pectin is useful for thickening other foods as well, including hot sauce. In addition to its thickening benefits, it stabilizes. As a stabilizer, it will keep your sauce from separating. For thickening, you will use about 1/8 teaspoon for each cup of hot sauce and boil for about 30 seconds.




More answers regarding keeping Hot Sauce From Separating

Answer 2

Xanthan gum will also work very well for holding this kind of sauce together. Somewhere around 0.2%-0.5% by weight should be right. Shear it in with a blender for a good long time. I'm a little concerned about the food safety of your sauce though. Are you certain it will remain good for weeks as you are planning?

Answer 3

You'll probably need some kind of emulsifier. For a long-term sauce like hot sauce, you're probably going to want an industrial strength one, and I don't really have many suggestions there...I never make sauces where I can't just use mustard or egg yolks.

Or you can just try sticking the whole thing in the blender for a while; that'll do it with salad dressing (for example), and it might work for your sauce as well.

Answer 4

i was thinking cornstarch would work in cream sauces for reheating in the microwave

Answer 5

We have found that blending the sauce for an extended period of time keeps it from separating...I mean days of blending...Just leave it in the blender and when time allows give it a good blending and then let it sit...You will find after about 3 days of periodic blending the sauce will no longer separate.

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