Spicy Bourbon BBQ Sauce
By stancec44
The secret to this spicy bourbon barbecue sauce is smoked bottled ketchup. Bourbon and molasses are added for a kickin’ barbecue sauce that’s perfect on ribs, pulled pork, burgers, chicken. No liquid smoke in this barbecue sauce recipe. Instead, this recipe makes smoked ketchup in order to impart a subtle smokiness to the resulting sauce. Yes, smoked ketchup. Believe it. Better yet, taste it. Whether by the spoonful or slathered all over ribs that are cooked low and slow. [Editor’s Note: Yes, we know, smoking ketchup may seem sorta fussy. But why not just toss it in the smoker along with your ribs or pork shoulder (or whatever you happen to be making and that you intend to slather this sauce all over) for the first couple hour? And if you do that, you may want to slip a drip pan under the meat and swap out the bacon fat in the recipe below for a tablespoon of the drippings.]
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Ingredients
- Two (24-ounce) bottles ketchup
- 2/3 cup bourbon
- 2/3 cup Dijon mustard
- 2/3 cup dark molasses
- 1/2 cup cold water
- 1/3 cup store-bought or homemade hot sauce
- 1/4 cup firmly packed light brown sugar
- 2 1/2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
- 4 teaspoons onion powder
- 4 teaspoons garlic powder
- 1 tablespoon rendered bacon drippings
- 1 tablespoon salt
Details
Adapted from leitesculinaria.com
Preparation
Step 1
1. Prepare a barrel smoker. You want the temperature to be between 225°F and 250°F (107°C and 121°C).
2. Place the ketchup in a large metal bowl, place the bowl in the smoker, and add a handful of the soaked hickory chips to the coals. Smoke the ketchup for 2 hours, stirring every 30 minutes. Be mindful of maintaining a consistent temperature inside the smoker, adding charcoal as needed to keep it in the 225°F to 250°F range (107°C and 121°C). You may need to add more soaked hickory chips to keep the smoke flowing.
3. Transfer the smoked ketchup to a large pot. Add the bourbon, mustard, molasses, water, hot red pepper sauce, brown sugar, Worcestershire sauce, onion powder, garlic powder, bacon drippings, and salt and stir well to combine. Place over low heat and cook, stirring occasionally for about 30 minutes, or until the sugar has dissolved and the sauce has thickened and darkened slightly. Immediately slather the sauce over some ribs or other meat of some sort. Any leftover sauce will keep, tightly covered, in the refrigerator for up to 2 weeks.
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