BBQ sauce
- footballguy51
- Peregrine

- Posts: 3025
- Joined: Wed May 23, 2007 5:19 pm
BBQ sauce
I'm making ribs for dinner tomorrow, and I bought a couple bottles of BBQ sauce to go on them while they cook in the crock pot. I've been wanting to make my own sauce, though, as I'm sure it will probably taste a little better than any of the bottled stuff. Does anybody have anything they've tried that turned out really nice, or have any brands of BBQ sauce that taste particularly good?
ROLL ALONG!!!
- Pete Segaard
- Peregrine

- Posts: 905
- Joined: Wed May 11, 2005 10:50 am
- Location: The banks of the mighty Portage River
Re: BBQ sauce
I have always been a fan of Sweet Baby Ray's, it has quite a bit of sugar though. I have never had any succes with a homemade BBQ sauce. If I want to try something new I usually look for something with less sugar/more tomato base.
Team Falcon Around
The Falcon formerly known as oaklane2
The Falcon formerly known as oaklane2
Re: BBQ sauce
Dittooaklane2 wrote:I have always been a fan of Sweet Baby Ray's.
I love people who can laugh at themselves. It saves me the effort.
-
billchase2
- Peregrine

- Posts: 702
- Joined: Wed Aug 11, 2004 10:00 pm
- Location: Ann Arbor
- Contact:
Re: BBQ sauce
Sweet Baby Ray's is good... however, my favorite is Famous Dave's (Rich and Sassy). Excellent BBQ sauce.
2008 BGSU: Master of Education Degree
2006 BGSU: Bachelor of Science in Technology Degree
04-06 University Activities Organization Director
02-04 FMB; 2004 Trumpet Squad Leader
Kappa Kappa Psi - Beta Kappa
2006 BGSU: Bachelor of Science in Technology Degree
04-06 University Activities Organization Director
02-04 FMB; 2004 Trumpet Squad Leader
Kappa Kappa Psi - Beta Kappa
Re: BBQ sauce
The girls in the house like Sweet Baby Rays, as well as Jack Daniels Hickory (yes, I know I said they don't like smoke ... don't ask).
Re: BBQ sauce
Pretty much every bottled BBQ sauce I've ever eaten tastes to me like a smoky form of molasses or brown sugar syrup. *blech* far too sweet for me.
My go to sauce for pulled pork is a South Carolina style mustard sauce. The recipe I use is:
4 parts mustard
2 parts vinegar
1 part honey
1 part brown sugar
few dashes hot sauce
S&P to taste
My hot sauce of choice is always Franks, and my "few dashes" ends up being "A lot of dashes".
Another sauce that I've really fallen in love with is the Apple City BBQ recipe that I got from the book, "Peace, Love, and BBQ" (absolutely FANTASTIC read if you've got any interest in BBQ, BTW). That recipe can be found at: http://bbq.about.com/od/barbecuesaucere ... 50617c.htm
Those are the 2 sauces I always have on hand (although used the last of the mustard last night...eeek!) I really haven't felt the need to branch out much. One is a great semi-sweet tomato based, the other is a fantastic mustard based. Occasionally I'll make a NC style vinegar sauce, but those aren't my fave at all. Both of these are infinitely better than anything I've gotten out of a bottle.
Also if you want to play around with sauce recipes every sauce is pretty much a balance of tart (vinegar/mustard), sweet (brown sugar, honey, ketchup, jellies), and spice (chipotle, cayenne, hot sauce, etc). Other flavors that work well in sauces, IMO, are fruits (use a good jelly to add fruit and some sweetness). Obviously mustard & ketchup, but don't forget they'll add tang/sweet as well as their base flavors. Smoke is a good addition, but I really don't like liquid smoke. If I want smoke I'll use Chipotles for the heat component...or I'll do my sauce cooking on the grill to get some smoke flavor to it.
Sauce is fun, you can pretty much tweak and play with it how you like, and come up with something new and original! And if you don't like it, the ingredients are mostly pretty cheap! I've experimented with quite a few sauces, though, and the 2 above are my faves. I've worked on a raspberry chipotle in the past, and haven't quite got it hammered out to perfection...may need to retry that one again and tweak it some more
My go to sauce for pulled pork is a South Carolina style mustard sauce. The recipe I use is:
4 parts mustard
2 parts vinegar
1 part honey
1 part brown sugar
few dashes hot sauce
S&P to taste
My hot sauce of choice is always Franks, and my "few dashes" ends up being "A lot of dashes".
Another sauce that I've really fallen in love with is the Apple City BBQ recipe that I got from the book, "Peace, Love, and BBQ" (absolutely FANTASTIC read if you've got any interest in BBQ, BTW). That recipe can be found at: http://bbq.about.com/od/barbecuesaucere ... 50617c.htm
Those are the 2 sauces I always have on hand (although used the last of the mustard last night...eeek!) I really haven't felt the need to branch out much. One is a great semi-sweet tomato based, the other is a fantastic mustard based. Occasionally I'll make a NC style vinegar sauce, but those aren't my fave at all. Both of these are infinitely better than anything I've gotten out of a bottle.
Also if you want to play around with sauce recipes every sauce is pretty much a balance of tart (vinegar/mustard), sweet (brown sugar, honey, ketchup, jellies), and spice (chipotle, cayenne, hot sauce, etc). Other flavors that work well in sauces, IMO, are fruits (use a good jelly to add fruit and some sweetness). Obviously mustard & ketchup, but don't forget they'll add tang/sweet as well as their base flavors. Smoke is a good addition, but I really don't like liquid smoke. If I want smoke I'll use Chipotles for the heat component...or I'll do my sauce cooking on the grill to get some smoke flavor to it.
Sauce is fun, you can pretty much tweak and play with it how you like, and come up with something new and original! And if you don't like it, the ingredients are mostly pretty cheap! I've experimented with quite a few sauces, though, and the 2 above are my faves. I've worked on a raspberry chipotle in the past, and haven't quite got it hammered out to perfection...may need to retry that one again and tweak it some more
- Lord_Byron
- Minister of Silly Walks

- Posts: 2158
- Joined: Fri Jul 23, 2004 7:04 am
- Location: Rochester NY
Re: BBQ sauce
Try this one for chicken.
It's really famous at chicken barbecues in Western NY, and it's delicious.
You can actually marinate the chicken in it first. It doesn't burn, so brushing on the chicken copiously as it cooks improves the flavor.
Cornell Barbecue Sauce
It's really famous at chicken barbecues in Western NY, and it's delicious.
You can actually marinate the chicken in it first. It doesn't burn, so brushing on the chicken copiously as it cooks improves the flavor.
Cornell Barbecue Sauce
BG '79
Twitter: @Vapid_Inanities
Twitter: @Vapid_Inanities
-
Falconboy
- John Lovett's Successor

- Posts: 5357
- Joined: Sat Jul 24, 2004 1:40 pm
- Location: Columbus
- Contact:
Re: BBQ sauce
Nice. I've been wanting to figure out some bbq sauce recipes. I like Sweet Baby Ray's too but I try to stay away from high fructose corn syrup whenever I can, so Bullseye is what I've been using lately. Where's the best place to find chipotle's anyway?hammb wrote:Pretty much every bottled BBQ sauce I've ever eaten tastes to me like a smoky form of molasses or brown sugar syrup. *blech* far too sweet for me.
My go to sauce for pulled pork is a South Carolina style mustard sauce. The recipe I use is:
4 parts mustard
2 parts vinegar
1 part honey
1 part brown sugar
few dashes hot sauce
S&P to taste
My hot sauce of choice is always Franks, and my "few dashes" ends up being "A lot of dashes".
Another sauce that I've really fallen in love with is the Apple City BBQ recipe that I got from the book, "Peace, Love, and BBQ" (absolutely FANTASTIC read if you've got any interest in BBQ, BTW). That recipe can be found at: http://bbq.about.com/od/barbecuesaucere ... 50617c.htm
Those are the 2 sauces I always have on hand (although used the last of the mustard last night...eeek!) I really haven't felt the need to branch out much. One is a great semi-sweet tomato based, the other is a fantastic mustard based. Occasionally I'll make a NC style vinegar sauce, but those aren't my fave at all. Both of these are infinitely better than anything I've gotten out of a bottle.
Also if you want to play around with sauce recipes every sauce is pretty much a balance of tart (vinegar/mustard), sweet (brown sugar, honey, ketchup, jellies), and spice (chipotle, cayenne, hot sauce, etc). Other flavors that work well in sauces, IMO, are fruits (use a good jelly to add fruit and some sweetness). Obviously mustard & ketchup, but don't forget they'll add tang/sweet as well as their base flavors. Smoke is a good addition, but I really don't like liquid smoke. If I want smoke I'll use Chipotles for the heat component...or I'll do my sauce cooking on the grill to get some smoke flavor to it.
Sauce is fun, you can pretty much tweak and play with it how you like, and come up with something new and original! And if you don't like it, the ingredients are mostly pretty cheap! I've experimented with quite a few sauces, though, and the 2 above are my faves. I've worked on a raspberry chipotle in the past, and haven't quite got it hammered out to perfection...may need to retry that one again and tweak it some more
Mid-2000's Anderson Animal
Re: BBQ sauce
Would it be too flippant to say the mexican aisle of your local grocery store?Falconboy wrote: Where's the best place to find chipotle's anyway?
I love people who can laugh at themselves. It saves me the effort.
- footballguy51
- Peregrine

- Posts: 3025
- Joined: Wed May 23, 2007 5:19 pm
Re: BBQ sauce
I know we carry dried peppers in the produce section at Walmart. We only have Guajillo peppers now, but we did also carry New Mexico peppers and Japones peppers. We may get them back in again.rood wrote:Would it be too flippant to say the mexican aisle of your local grocery store?Falconboy wrote: Where's the best place to find chipotle's anyway?
As for the Mexican aisle, I know at Walmart we have a lot of taco shells, tortillas, salsas, seasonings, and some canned peppers in the rice aisle (the aisle has Mexican and Oriental foods and dried beans), but if you don't want dried peppers or canned peppers, Walmart won't carry anything fresh outside of Jalapeños, Anaheims, Poblanos, and Serranos, and Mini Sweet Peppers.
**For those of you that don't know, I work part-time at Walmart in the Produce section.**
ROLL ALONG!!!
Re: BBQ sauce
Falconboy wrote:Nice. I've been wanting to figure out some bbq sauce recipes. I like Sweet Baby Ray's too but I try to stay away from high fructose corn syrup whenever I can, so Bullseye is what I've been using lately. Where's the best place to find chipotle's anyway?hammb wrote:Pretty much every bottled BBQ sauce I've ever eaten tastes to me like a smoky form of molasses or brown sugar syrup. *blech* far too sweet for me.
My go to sauce for pulled pork is a South Carolina style mustard sauce. The recipe I use is:
4 parts mustard
2 parts vinegar
1 part honey
1 part brown sugar
few dashes hot sauce
S&P to taste
My hot sauce of choice is always Franks, and my "few dashes" ends up being "A lot of dashes".
Another sauce that I've really fallen in love with is the Apple City BBQ recipe that I got from the book, "Peace, Love, and BBQ" (absolutely FANTASTIC read if you've got any interest in BBQ, BTW). That recipe can be found at: http://bbq.about.com/od/barbecuesaucere ... 50617c.htm
Those are the 2 sauces I always have on hand (although used the last of the mustard last night...eeek!) I really haven't felt the need to branch out much. One is a great semi-sweet tomato based, the other is a fantastic mustard based. Occasionally I'll make a NC style vinegar sauce, but those aren't my fave at all. Both of these are infinitely better than anything I've gotten out of a bottle.
Also if you want to play around with sauce recipes every sauce is pretty much a balance of tart (vinegar/mustard), sweet (brown sugar, honey, ketchup, jellies), and spice (chipotle, cayenne, hot sauce, etc). Other flavors that work well in sauces, IMO, are fruits (use a good jelly to add fruit and some sweetness). Obviously mustard & ketchup, but don't forget they'll add tang/sweet as well as their base flavors. Smoke is a good addition, but I really don't like liquid smoke. If I want smoke I'll use Chipotles for the heat component...or I'll do my sauce cooking on the grill to get some smoke flavor to it.
Sauce is fun, you can pretty much tweak and play with it how you like, and come up with something new and original! And if you don't like it, the ingredients are mostly pretty cheap! I've experimented with quite a few sauces, though, and the 2 above are my faves. I've worked on a raspberry chipotle in the past, and haven't quite got it hammered out to perfection...may need to retry that one again and tweak it some more
The canned Chipotle's in adobo are usually found in the mexican aisle with other canned peppers, refried beans, etc.
If you want the dry chipotles they are sometimes found in the produce section in a plastic bag. Most stores are pretty hit or miss on whether or not they'll have these at any given time.
You should also be able to find chipotle powder in the spice section of most stores...it is essentially the dried pepper ground up into a powder.
-
Falconboy
- John Lovett's Successor

- Posts: 5357
- Joined: Sat Jul 24, 2004 1:40 pm
- Location: Columbus
- Contact:
Re: BBQ sauce
Actually now that I think about it, I believe I've seen chipotle's in jars at Kroger stores here in Findlay.hammb wrote:Falconboy wrote:Nice. I've been wanting to figure out some bbq sauce recipes. I like Sweet Baby Ray's too but I try to stay away from high fructose corn syrup whenever I can, so Bullseye is what I've been using lately. Where's the best place to find chipotle's anyway?hammb wrote:Pretty much every bottled BBQ sauce I've ever eaten tastes to me like a smoky form of molasses or brown sugar syrup. *blech* far too sweet for me.
My go to sauce for pulled pork is a South Carolina style mustard sauce. The recipe I use is:
4 parts mustard
2 parts vinegar
1 part honey
1 part brown sugar
few dashes hot sauce
S&P to taste
My hot sauce of choice is always Franks, and my "few dashes" ends up being "A lot of dashes".
Another sauce that I've really fallen in love with is the Apple City BBQ recipe that I got from the book, "Peace, Love, and BBQ" (absolutely FANTASTIC read if you've got any interest in BBQ, BTW). That recipe can be found at: http://bbq.about.com/od/barbecuesaucere ... 50617c.htm
Those are the 2 sauces I always have on hand (although used the last of the mustard last night...eeek!) I really haven't felt the need to branch out much. One is a great semi-sweet tomato based, the other is a fantastic mustard based. Occasionally I'll make a NC style vinegar sauce, but those aren't my fave at all. Both of these are infinitely better than anything I've gotten out of a bottle.
Also if you want to play around with sauce recipes every sauce is pretty much a balance of tart (vinegar/mustard), sweet (brown sugar, honey, ketchup, jellies), and spice (chipotle, cayenne, hot sauce, etc). Other flavors that work well in sauces, IMO, are fruits (use a good jelly to add fruit and some sweetness). Obviously mustard & ketchup, but don't forget they'll add tang/sweet as well as their base flavors. Smoke is a good addition, but I really don't like liquid smoke. If I want smoke I'll use Chipotles for the heat component...or I'll do my sauce cooking on the grill to get some smoke flavor to it.
Sauce is fun, you can pretty much tweak and play with it how you like, and come up with something new and original! And if you don't like it, the ingredients are mostly pretty cheap! I've experimented with quite a few sauces, though, and the 2 above are my faves. I've worked on a raspberry chipotle in the past, and haven't quite got it hammered out to perfection...may need to retry that one again and tweak it some more
The canned Chipotle's in adobo are usually found in the mexican aisle with other canned peppers, refried beans, etc.
If you want the dry chipotles they are sometimes found in the produce section in a plastic bag. Most stores are pretty hit or miss on whether or not they'll have these at any given time.
You should also be able to find chipotle powder in the spice section of most stores...it is essentially the dried pepper ground up into a powder.
Mid-2000's Anderson Animal
