Saturday, May 21, 2016
Water Of Life Hot Sauce Review
This is the first review (that I can think of off the top of my head, anyway) of a sauce made by a company from Utah, let alone one local to Salt Lake City, which Terrapin Station is...they are perhaps a bit more known for their selection of dried meats and snack nuts than the hot sauce, though I have seen this one around a bit. I've had it on my list but neglected to pick up a bottle as it never coincided with a need for what appeared to be a fruit-based sauce (and it is) at the time I saw it. However, I spied a bottle at a convenience store, of all places and snagged it on the spot...then promptly forgot about it on the shelf for a few weeks...when I did get it, the wax label was nearly fused on, which was an enormous pain to remove, but well worth the effort, in the end.
Fruit-based sauces are not something I eat a lot of and their sauce is best described as occasional use by me. I do like it on fried chicken strips quite a bit and keep some on hand for that, so I can mix and match with my eternally beloved Louisiana-style sauce, but I don't typically have fried chicken all that much, so a bottle can go a good long while and I don't tend to have more than 1 of those open at once. In this case, I sort of made it a point and immediately kicked myself for passing it by for so long and waiting so long to try it.
Make no mistake; this is a ghost pepper sauce, so it does have a pretty decent kick to it. The fruit is definitely leaning far heavier towards the tropical and citrus side of things and I imagine this would have pretty far ranging uses with things outside of chicken, such as pork, fish or even drinks, if you're into that kind of thing. There is an interesting use of tamarind in here as well, though I don't see this overall going particularly well with Asiatic dishes, unless they too lean towards the citrus-y or tropical side of things. It is at once a very pleasant and very interesting taste, but unless you're partaking of something that will do well with sweet heat, it won't be compatible across the board.
Bottom line: Very, very solid entry from Terrapin and a sauce I found somewhat engaging and dazzling...at least in the proper application. Heat is solid, but not overbearing for chileheads, though I suspect non-chileheads will probably find this too much for comfort.
Breakdown:
Heat level: 6
Flavor: 8
Flexibility: 6
Enjoyment to dollar factor: 9
Overall: 7
Sunday, May 8, 2016
The Antidote Hot Sauce Review
On the surface, this seems like an easy way to spike a Louisiana-style sauce: simply add the relatively popular Habanero, which will supply a solid amount of heat and not be too offensive taste-wise, containing none of the bitterness, for instance, of the Scorpion or Jolokia peppers. I think this temptation is certainly attractive to sauce-makers on a number of levels and I see it even as far as Tabasco using it and it definitely adds more heat, typically on the back end, but to me, it also adds an element to a Louisiana-style sauce I don't necessarily want, since I am not, by rights, much of a fan of Habanero and certainly not to the extent of the gorgeous Cayenne, for instance.
As Habanero-flavored Louisiana-style sauces go, this is a good one, definitely one of the better entries on that side of thing. If you're a fan of that flavor combination, you will find much to enjoy here. There is solid heat, but nothing particularly scorching, although it seems to be amplified a bit by the heavy vinegar presence. It definitely is hotter than most of the Louisiana-style sauces and probably a bit moreso than several of the ones using Habanero also. It is also notably redder than the original Zombie Cajun.
Taste is pretty solid as well. This is very nicely blended, but for me, I find the presence of Habanero to be more distracting than anything. This is also a sauce that needs considerably more agitation than the regular Zombie Cajun, with what I'm guessing is pepper mash that likes to stick to the side of the plastic bottle. Again, no restrictor cap, either, so oversaucing is always on the table (no pun) and this would probably not be a good sauce to do that with. Happily, it is somewhat of an improvement on the taste of the original and the odd flavoring note I mentioned in the other one is entirely absent here. This one tends to overpower stuff, though, so usage tends to be restricted to foods with a stronger flavor base.
Bottom line: For me, this is not a sauce I would either use regularly or keep on hand, as I'm not a fan of that flavor combination. It is hotter then the original, but it is also different tasting and if you don't like Habanero flavoring in your Louisiana-style sauce, like yours truly, give this one a pass. If you do, however, you will be hard-pressed to improve on this.
Breakdown:
Heat level: 5
Flavor: 5
Flexibility: 6
Enjoyment to dollar factor: 4
Overall: 5
Saturday, May 7, 2016
Cheap Thrill Cayenne Hot Sauce Review
Note: Support video available here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fS82X5lunLo
Here we have what can only charitably be called an unnecessary sauce. We have, in the Louisiana-style hot sauces, the Louisiana Hot Sauce brand, Crystal, Trappey's variations, TryMe brand, even old Tabasco, which is stretching in my mind a bit, but still conceivably fits and my current favorite, Irazu. I don't know where you shop, but bet your bottom dollar they have one (if it's Kroger, they definitely do). Point being, there is tons of sources and at nearly every price point, so to bring something to the table this late in the game, you need to differentiate yourself somehow. These guys evidently are taking aim right for the bottom and shooting for being the low-price leaders.
The sauce isn't quite that bad, but let me be clear. It's not all that wonderful, either. This is a very much middle-of-the-road sauce, but with a price point 3X that of Red Devil, for instance. Is there some heat? Sure, but it is sparing at best. Flavor is a step down and there is nothing really to justify a higher price point. They do some things right, such as using Cayenne as their pepper base for the mash, but they're not re-inventing the wheel here so much as just using different packaging. In this day and age, that's not enough to really entice much interest or excitement.
Bottom line: This is another entry into the Louisiana-style, no more, no less and nothing really to differentiate it, other than a label that uses the word "cheap", which is not an entirely inaccurate description of the actual sauce, but is not reflective of the price, which is considerably more expensive than nearly every other well known sauce in this category. Not much need for this.
Breakdown:
Heat level: 2
Flavor: 5
Flexibility: 5
Enjoyment to dollar factor: 3
Overall: 4