All barbecue cooks have their own "secret sauce," but for the most part,
each relies on some sort of sugar, something acidic like vinegar, fat –
typically butter – and something else to make it special. This sauce
uses molasses, lemon juice, bourbon and Worcestershire sauce as its main
flavors. It has that tart, sweet, salty, rich and spicy combination
that I think all great barbecue sauces need. Use this with ribs, pulled
pork or even tri-tip.
Note that most (not all) of the alcohol from the bourbon will boil away
while the sauce reduces, leaving bourbon's distinctive caramel-flavored
tang.
- 1/4 cup vegetable oil, such as canola or peanut
- 1/4 cup butter
- 1 chopped chile pepper, such as a serrano
- 1 medium yellow or white onion, grated
- 1 cup bourbon or Tennessee whiskey
- 1/2 cup ketchup or tomato sauce
- 1/2 cup lemon juice
- 1/2 cup apple cider vinegar
- 1/3 cup dark molasses
- 1/3 cup Worcestershire sauce
- 2-3 tablespoons brown sugar
- Salt to taste
1 Heat the butter and oil in a sauce pan over medium-high heat.
2 Grate the onion through the coarse grate of a box grater, or finely mince the onion if you don't have a grater.
3 Add grated onion and chile to the oil/butter combination and
cook over medium heat for 3-4 minutes, or until onions turn
translucent. You do not want the onions to turn color.
4 Take the pan off the heat and add the bourbon. Return to the
stove, turn up the heat to medium-high again and boil down the bourbon
for 5 minutes.
5 Add the ketchup, lemon juice, vinegar, Worcestershire sauce, molasses, and the sugar. Mix well and return to a simmer.
6 Cook the sauce for a few minutes to combine the flavors and
then taste test it. Is it salty enough? (It should be from the
Worcestershire sauce). If not, add salt. Is it spicy hot enough? If not,
add a little cayenne powder. Is it sweet enough? If not, add some
molasses.
7 Let the sauce cook down slowly until it thickens, about 20
minutes. Keep it on low heat while your ribs cook. Alternatively, you
can make this sauce ahead of time and reheat it when you cook the meat.
It will stay good in the fridge at least a week; I've held mine for two
weeks with no problem.
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