Spyke
levireply

A finnish friend of mine brought some for me. They are SO GOOD!

2

I might be addicted to this stuff. For a brand readily available in supermarkets it is really good, delicious and hot.

It isn't anything like tobasco though imo.

3
Valmondreply
lemmy.world

They make the absolute beast of a spice mix, GrillKrydda. I met a top chef in France that even imported it for himself, when I visit Sweden I bring back kilos if that stuff. But they don't ship outside sweden (or maybe scandinavia, I always thought it was a Swedish company, the more you know!)

Here is the little spice we have left 🥲

6

They had a more Swedish name (the founder’s surname or similar) but adopted their Mexican-sounding name during the 1990s taco fad in Sweden.

4
lemmy.ca

I know this is Buy European, but if you want hot sauce with a Mexican name/theme, how about Mexican hot sauces?

Valentina, Búfalo, El Yucateco, Huichol, La Guacamaya etc.

But not Tabasco, Cholula, Tapatío: all US companies using Mexican culture, names etc.

(Indeed, I live about 30 minutes from the city of Cholula, and "Cholula" sauce is stacked in the "Ethnic/Foreign" aisle of a few supermarkets, and never found in ordinary shops.)

6

That's a different route that you maybe do not want to take, but you can easily ferment your own sauce. Though it may be more of a hobby than an actual source of condiment (if you're not into this kind of thing).

4

In Germany many supermarkets (Kaufland, Globus, Rewe, Edeka,...) have hot sauces from 'Hot Mamas' which is a brand by Luise Händlmaier which is quite popular for their mustard. All sauces I tested so far were quite good and definitely better than Tabasco.

https://www.hotmamas.de/

3
krf
szmer.info

Sadly, there is probably none that can be reliably sources, there is no barrel-aged vinegar based mild hot sauce similar to Tabasco, as everyone was trying to develop their unique extra-hot blend.

There are plenty of good hot sauces imported from Asia (Thai Sriracha, Indonesian Sambal Oelek [for me the best is windmill brand]), many interesting (and hot AF) European bigger brands (I like Polish Roleski, they have nice hot sauce range) and local small-batch craft brands, but sadly no direct Tabasco replacement, as there's no direct bourbon replacement – there are tens of thousands of interesting flavors across the world, so I can live with that for a while.

2
jmcsreply
discuss.tchncs.de

Some Piri-piri sauce brands are in the same ball park of hotness as Tabasco and it's rare for them to be much hotter.

The flavour profile is a bit different but not as much as Sriracha for example.

1

Piri-piri sauce

Hotness is fine, but I couldn't yet find one with the right consistency (most of them have some thickeners, as they are, well, sauces), and right flavor profile – I'm considering trying to make my own batch of either salt-macerated or fermented birdseye chilli sauce without any extra additives and mix with barrel aged Italian white wine vinegar, this should give a similar vibes.

Fortunately, I'm using this particular sauce mostly in cocktails every now and then, so I'm not in a hurry.

1

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Good European alternative to Tabasco? | Spyke