Fiery Habanero Hot Sauce
This homemade Fiery Habanero Hot Sauce recipe is exploding with the spicy, fruity flavor of fresh habanero peppers. It’s great on eggs, tacos, nachos, or anywhere you want to add loads of spicy flavor. A fun way to use up homegrown habaneros!
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
Fiery Habanero Hot Sauce – I think serrano peppers are great for making foods spicy, but they don’t have very much flavor. Jalapenos have awesome flavor, but not quite enough heat.
Meanwhile, the orange habanero has a wonderful, fruit-forward flavor that also packs a lot of heat! It’s a Win-Win-Win (for my fellow The Office fans). Which is why I chose it to make this hot sauce!
Since my family is a bunch of chile heads, I cook with a lot of different types of chile peppers.
In fact, I’m growing habanero peppers, Anaheim chile peppers, hot banana peppers, jalapeno peppers, and sweet mini snacking peppers in my garden this year!
Making homemade hot sauce is a great way to use up an abundance of peppers growing in your garden!
Ingredients needed to make this recipe (scroll down to recipe card for complete recipe):
- Habanero peppers – orange habaneros are used in this recipe
- Onion
- Garlic
- Roma tomato
- White vinegar
- Water
- Oil – vegetable oil or avocado oil
- Salt
How to make Habanero Hot Sauce
- To make this hot sauce, I start by sautéing the onion in oil to take the sharp bite of raw onion out and give the sauce a wonderful oniony flavor that’s slightly sweet to help mellow the spiciness from the habaneros.
- After the onion has softened a little, add the garlic for just a minute or two, then throw it all in the blender with the rest of the ingredients and blend until nice and smooth.
- The result is a slightly fruity, super flavorful hot sauce with head-sweating heat. Enjoy!
How to use Habanero Hot Sauce
My family loves spicy food, so we use it on EVERYTHING, however, here are some of our favorite uses:
- On tacos or nachos
- On the side for burritos
- It’s great on eggs or breakfast casseroles
- My kids love it as a dipping sauce with chicken tenders
How spicy is this hot sauce?
While not considered a “super hot” chile pepper, habanero peppers are still very hot. On the scoville scale, they have a rating of 100,000-350,000. In contrast, the jalapeno is between 2,500-8,000.
This sauce is for those looking for a hot sauce that is very hot – not for those looking for a mild or medium hot sauce!
It was designed for chile heads that, like my family, probably have a collection of hot sauce, order their Thai food with a spice level 8 or 9, add hot sauce to everything, and/or just love spicy food.
How long is homemade hot sauce good for?
Because it is not fermented, canned, or water bathed, this hot sauce should be stored in an air-tight container in the refrigerator and used within 1-2 weeks.
What else can you make with habanero peppers?
Flavorful Eats is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.
NOTES:
- This recipe was created using the traditional, orange habanero pepper. I did not recipe test this with white, red, chocolate or any other types of habanero.
- Vegetable oil, olive oil, or avocado oil are all great in this recipe.
- There will be potent fumes in the kitchen from making this hot sauce. Open a window for ventilation if you’re sensitive and/or have kids or pets near.
- I have made this with between 9-14 habanero peppers. The spicier you like it, lean more towards 14. Even with 9 habaneros, this hot sauce is very spicy!
- The easiest way to get the hot sauce from the blender to a bottle is with a funnel. If you need one, you can get one HERE from Amazon.
I just published 20 Recipes Using Habanero Peppers. It has main courses, side dishes, sauces, and even a dessert! Check out the recipes and let me know what you think!
Fiery Habanero Hot Sauce
Equipment
- Blender
- Sauté pot/pan
Ingredients
- 1 tbsp vegetable oil
- 1 medium yellow onion chopped
- 5-6 garlic cloves smashed
- 9-14 habanero peppers stems removed
- 1 Roma tomato chopped
- 1/4 tsp. salt
- 1/2 cup white vinegar
- 1/4 cup water
Instructions
- Sauté onion in oil for 5 minutes or so, stirring frequently, until it starts to soften. We don't want any color on the onion. Add the garlic and sauté for just a minute or two and turn off the heat.
- Add the onion and garlic to a blender with the rest of the ingredients. Blend until smooth.
- For a smoother hot sauce, strain it into your empty bottle, otherwise, pour the hot sauce into a funnel in your empty bottle.
- Wait for hot sauce to come to room temperature, then refrigerate. Store hot sauce in refrigerator and use within 1-2 weeks. Enjoy!
Did you make this recipe? Rate it and let me know in the comments below! ♥
I also have a fun Facebook group for us foodies to share recipes and talk about food. I’d love to have you! Request to join HERE. Cheers!
I made this with habaneros from our garden and love it. I used 15 chilis to make it HOT and substituted a large carrot for the tomato to add just a hint of sweetness. It is superb! Highly recommend if you want to try making your own hot sauce, very simple and minimal vapors. 6-7 days in the fridge? As if it will last that long…
Next time, maybe ghost chilis.
Thanks for the review, Ed! You’ll have to let me know how the ghost chiles turn out ;)
Would you be able to freeze this in an ice cube tray for longer usage?
Hi there! I’ve never personally done it, but I have heard that you can freeze it! They say to freeze it in ice cube trays, then once frozen, transfer the cubes to an air-tight, freezer-safe container. Then you can defrost the cubes as needed. Label the container with the date and use withing 6 months. Hope that helps!
Super easy to make. Amazing flavour. 10/10
OMG! This is the ONLY recipe I will use. I did one each in Haberano, Pablano, Serrano, Jalapenos. Will be making Ghost Peppers, Sweet Bananas and Green Bells! THANK YOU!
Awesome!
We put it on everything!
Have you ever tried any ghost peppers or Carolina reapers? They’re more intense than Habaneros
I’m actually working on a hotter hot sauce with those! Perfecting a good balance between heat and flavor is important to me. :)
does this need to be refrigerated and how long will it be good for, time wise?
Hi there! The last line of the recipe in “instructions” states, ” Keep hot sauce kept in refrigerator and use within 6-7 days.” Enjoy!
I have a question. Could this be made in bigger quantities and canned for long term storage? If so how would you process it? Would you water bath or pressure can it and for how long. Thanks!!
Hi there! I do not do any canning, so I am unable to to give any advice in that arena. Sorry!
My wife has has made this and we eat it with almost every thing.. it’s sooo good!!!
So glad you guys enjoyed it! :) Thanks for your feedback!
Great recipe!