Showing posts with label sauce review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sauce review. Show all posts

Wednesday, 21 April 2021

WALKERSWOOD Jerk Seasoning HOT & SPICY wings

My folks are snowbirds - every winter they head down to Florida and stay there for a few months. When they come back, they often bring me gifts of items or products that we don't have here. In 2019 they came back bearing gifts and one of the items was Walkerwsood Jerk Seasoning. I love jerk chicken, but had never made it at home. "This would be great on wings!" I thought to myself.

Now that first jar I used on chicken thighs, and it was amazing. Then I discovered we can buy Walkerswood in Canada. I kept making thighs but never wings. Recently it's been 3 of us eating in the house, so when I went to do the thighs, I didn't really think there was enough for all of us and all the marinade, so I used it as an excuse to add some wings.



Walkerswood, which I keep incorrectly calling Walkers, is a Jamaican company that's been going for years:

"WALKERSWOOD CARIBBEAN FOODS BEGAN IN 1978 WITH TWO GUYS SELLING JERK PORK ON THE SIDE OF A ROAD. TODAY WE HAVE MORE THAN 80 EMPLOYEES AND DISTRIBUTION INTO NORTH AMERICA, EUROPE, NEW ZEALAND AND THROUGHOUT THE CARIBBEAN." 

This is the most common product I see of theirs in grocery stores where it generally retails for almost $5 a jar. They come in Mild and Hot & Spicy, and I only get the Hot & Spicy kind, because, why would you not?


The bottle is 289g and is imported from Jamaica, so I feel like it's authentic, at least, commercially authentic. The best jerk chicken I've had was scratch made from a friend from Trinidad and it was amazing. This is the best I can get from a jar I'm pretty sure.

The ingredients are natural and full of flavour: "Scallions, scotch bonnet peppers, salt, black pepper, all spice, nutmeg, citric acid, cane sugar, thyme leaves." Now the 280g bottle may not seem like a lot, but it does a fair amount of chicken.


First off, jerk seasoning, let alone jerk chicken, is not pretty. You open the jar and it's brown and not that appetizing to, say, a North American palette. But the aroma is so spicy (I use spicy both in seasoning and in heat) and intoxicating. It smells fruity and not, pungent and not. It's so very hard to describe but bottom line, it smelled good!


They call it a "seasoning" but to me, this is a marinade. It's a thick paste that you rub into your meat and let marinate for some time.

It's thick, and slowly pours out. I like that, because it's not water-down. Every inch is flavour. You can see the spices and mixed in little burst of red colour from the scotch bonnet peppers.


While they recommend 1oz (28g) of this marinade for 2lbs (or 1kg) of meat I use a much bigger ratio of sauce. I use the whole bottle. Traditionally, one would 'wash' the chicken (rinse it under water to remove blood, juices etc) and then cut slits all over the chicken to maximize the marinade, but I wanted the skin intact for both the wings and the thighs. They also recommend adding oil, but I skip that too.



I did rub that chicken good, trying to coat every nook and cranny, get under the skin of the thighs a bit too. 


After massaging that chicken I did a thorough hand wash, then covered the bowl and put it in the fridge to marinate over night. Often when I'm making the jerk thighs I'm not well prepared and only marinate them a few hours before. I wanted them to sit overnight and really suck up that jerk.



The next evening I was very ready to start grilling. Now in a perfect world, I would have done these on a charcoal grill over an actual fire. You want that char and smell that only comes from charcoal. But I only have a gas grill, so gas grill it was.


I got my propane up nice and high so that when the chicken hit the metal grates, there was immediate sizzling. I wanted to heat them at high heat, crisp the skin as much as possible without burning (because this marinade will burn), flip, then cook for longer on lower heat.


 It was cold outside, but the smell and the warmth from the grill made it very tolerable! The smell wafted out onto the street and people out for a night stroll or walking their dogs kept commenting how good it smelled!


My grill is very uneven in it's heat, so anything towards the back cooks faster than the front. I was proud of myself on this occasion because I usually put the chicken on and run inside to do something, coming out to a big fire from the chicken grease. 


Not this time - I was patient and just watched it do it's thing. I'm not only looking for the chicken skin to crisp up a bit, but I'm waiting to make sure the chicken reaches 165f or 75c. Back in the day I used to just go on gut and visual to take them off, but especially after I took a food safety handling course, temperature is the only sure way. Well, short of cutting into the bird, but I don't want to loose those juices so early. 



The wings are obviously much smaller than the thighs, so I had to watch out for them being cooked faster. If I had thought things out with my head instead of my belly, I would have put the wings on later to match cooking times, but I put them on at the same time.  In no time the wings were done.


I took the wings off the direct heat and put them all on the upper rack of my grill. After being bombarded with the drool inducing aroma of jerk and heat, I evoked my pitmaster privilege's and at a wing on the spot, in the cold, no plate, no napkin. Just pure wingey goodness and burnt fingers. And my my was it good!



I recorded first bites: "That's so good! I don't even know what that flavour is. There's kind of a little tang, a little sweet, a lot of heat ... [the chicken] it's still juicy. Oh my gaaa, that's soo good. It's got some heat, it's got a lot of flavour, I don't know how you describe it. So tangy, garlicky, zing. It's good."

This was honestly probably the best wings I've ever had off my grill. It was everything you want in a Jerk wing: crispy skin, hot juicy meat. Bones pull apart easily. The flavour is all over the place and the heat is good. There's smoke, there's spice. Beautiful. When it comes to the thighs, they too turned out really well. Obviously more meat, and while I like it, the skin to meat ratio is much better from the wings. Dang, I'd eat this either way that's for sure.


WOULD I BUY IT AGAIN?

Yes. Easily yes. I've had it on thighs for a long time, but I'd argue it's even better on wings. Heat, flavour, it's got everything. 


Walkerswood Jerk Seasoning (Hot & Spicy)
walkerswood.com



Thursday, 18 March 2021

WICKED SMART HOT SAUCES

"We Bring Good Food to Life"

I love hot sauce. I'm lucky because there is so much hot sauce out there to try. A lot. Some of it good, some great, and some terrible. What makes a great hot sauce is subjective on some factors, but I think there are a few qualities that really make a difference; a sense of history, good quality ingredients, and a passion. So I was excited when Ifoma Smart hooked me up with his small batch sauces, Wicked Smart from right here in Ontario.


DISCLOSURE: This was a free sample sent to me and I was not paid to promote the product. I like to support local small businesses, but my reviews are honest and come with no expectation of promotion. If I was being paid to promote, I would say so. I always appreciate being sent samples to review, but I'm here giving my opinion in as much of an unbiased way as I can.  


Photo: CBC Kitchener News 

Wicked Smart Hot Sauces are new on the block, but they are getting the word out quick! The CBC did a report on them recently on the rise of small batch hot sauce makers in the Kitchener area. When I was sent samples of their sauces, I had a few questions myself about their sauces and themselves:


Who and What is Wicked Smart Hot Sauce?

"Hi! I'm Ifoma Smart, owner and creator of Wicked Smart Hot Sauce. We are a Kitchener-based company that creates small-batch hot sauce that balances heat with flavour. We are inspired by a family tradition of using the freshest local produce.  All our sauces are vegan, gluten free, and contain zero preservatives or additives."


How did you get into the Hot Sauce biz?

"Hot sauce is in my blood. I grew up in a family that enjoys good food and vibrant music. Both were ubiquitous in my household and hot sauce was the perfect accompaniment for every dish and every gathering. These experiences continue to be a cultural linkage to the Caribbean for me and other West Indians. As I grew older, I experimented making different sauces for my friends and family often giving them away as gifts. When my mom "retired" from making hot sauce after trying my sauces, I knew I was onto something.  The COVID pandemic provided the perfect opportunity to use my spare time to refine my recipes, and come up with a unique but creative branding for my hot sauces."

What does hot sauce mean to you? What sets your sauces apart from others?

"Hot sauce is a metaphor for life. It's a flavour enhancer that causes you to really slow down, be present and enjoy the complexity that each sauce brings to a dish."  "The appeal of Wicked Smart Hot Sauces is that they bring the heat AND the flavour. Unlike other fermented sauces that rely on vinegar, salt or other additives, we use the natural flavours of the peppers and other produce to bring the flavour forward then we hit you with the capsaicin burn."

Where did the name "Wicked Smart" Come From?

"Beyond the obvious Bostonian/Good Will Hunting reference, Wicked Smart is a play on a few concepts. 1. Smart is my last name. 2. When a pepper sauce/hot sauce really hits you with the heat, Trinidadians say it's "Wicked"! 3. When hot sauce is nothing but heat, Trinidadians call it "an ignorant hot sauce" because it's a one-trick pony that doesn't have any other appeal or flavour."



I mean that all sounds great; movie references, cultural roots, fresh ingredients. And these sauces come from Kitchener Ontario and I'm always happy to promote and support small Canadian, and local Ontario businesses. When that package arrived, I was very excited to unbox and see these sauces in person.



Those bottles looked 'wicked'! Wicked Smart currently makes two sauces: Calypso & Soca. Right away my wife pointed out the names are based on music: "Both music styles originate from Trinidad and are a nod to my cultural heritage" Smart told me. Sounds like it's time to get this party started!



First off, I really like the aesthetic of this whole product. The name is great with the play on Ifoma's name, and the 'ignorant' vs 'smart' aspects. The logo also is cute but smart, even brandishing Smart's glasses and emphasizing the intelligent aspect of the sauce. The use of black as the dominant background really makes the other colours pop. Also the website is nice and clean as is their Instagram account. 

The bottles are 148ml each or 5 fl oz. and are a good size to add to your sauce collection, or just trying if you are not a big collector of sauces like I am. The sauces are "vegan, gluten free, and contain zero preservatives or additives" so you are going to need to put them in the fridge after opening.


I was surprised when I pulled off the sealed tops and removed the caps to find a 'dripper' cap (fun fact, didn't know what this was called until researching it right now). That's a warning sign about heat and how they want you to distribute this sauce ... so you are not flooding your food but adding drips because you don't want to waste or flood your food with something potentially painful! 


THE SAUCES


CALYPSO

I was drawn to this bottle first. I love the name, the colour, and I had a feeling it was going to be a really good heat. It's a dark but nice colour of red, and you could see the chili seeds floating around. The fact that we were dealing with both Scotch Bonnet and Carolina Reaper peppers, you know there was going to be some bite ... but then the ingredients list some clementines in there so that sounds sweet and interesting!


SOCA

Soca is the party sauce. It's a bright yellow and you can see the fibres as well as chili seeds in the mix. The yellow tells me it's going to be sweet, and seeing it's made with 'fresh organic peaches' sounds really interesting. "Finally a hot sauce for people who want that fruity sweet heat on pizza but can't stand pineapple. Hot but approachable."



Before going right to wings or other food, I wanted to sample the sauces au natural. I shook each bottle to get some sauce on the plate to compare the two. Both sauces are not thick and not thin in a great balance of texture. Thick enough that there is substance to the sauce but still pours nicely, but not so watery that it just washes everything out. You can tell that if you toss something into both, the sauces are going to cling on.


I was expecting a real fruity smell from Calypso that I have had with sauces made from Scotch Bonnet, but the smell was much more balanced. There is a sweet note in the smell, but I also get the peppers, the garlic and the vinegar. It's really intoxicating and appealed to my tastes. 


The sauce immediately stings the tip of the tongue; like little needles. It glides back and attacks the throat, causing slight coughs. At the same time, the flavour of the pepper is there, that garlic, and the sweetness from the clementines. That sweetness is mild but it really helps round out the sauce. It had a bright and dark element to it and I like that. The heat is killer and this is not a sauce for the uninitiated! 


Soca did provide an immediate fruity smell, but with that bright yellow colour it's to be expected. My smell detectors aren't that refined, so I couldn't tell it was peaches. There is almost a light sour smell after the fruity burst. It smells yummy.


My first fingerfull is almost like the flavour of jam; bright, sweet and a just a bit thick. But as I taste it, a small storm of spice goes to the back of the mouth. It's a nice little sting, but definitely not overpowering. This sauce zings with sweet and then spice. As Smart says, Soca "is more fruit-forward due to the peaches but the habanero definitely lets you know it's there!"


THE WING TEST



I dusted up some fresh chicken wings and tossed them into the airfryer and cooked till they were crispy. I did ask Smart which sauce was best for wings and how he would serve them on wings and this is what he said:

 "Both sauces are unique in their own regard but I'm a huge advocate of having multiple flavors of sauced wings. My recommendation would be to try them both!!  Smoked and tossed then smoked again."

I think these sauces would really compliment a BBQued wing, especially smoked. However, I'm not set up for smoking on my grill and I was really wanting to try the sauces on crispy wing so that's the direction I went. 


I split my wings into Soca and Calypso batches. I had to remove the dripper plug because I wanted lots of sauce coming out. I wanted the sauce served raw and not incorporated into butter or anything to get the full flavour of each sauce. After generous globs of each sauce, I tossed and plated the wings.


They looked great and I was excited to try these sauces on wings! You could easily tell the difference between the two in colour, with Calypso being a more red-orange colour like a traditional hot wing, and the Soca being that yellow/orange colour from the peaches. 





As I predicted, the sauce really clung to the wings well. They were well coated and not much dripped off, which is kind of a shame as I wouldn't have minded dipping exposed bitten segments of chicken into leftover sauce. 


I haven't been this excited to eat wings at home in a while! They smelled good, they looked good, so I was hoping they were going to taste good too!


SOCA

On the wings, this sauce was definitely unique. I have not had a wing flavour like this before. You have that sweet and sting going on that compliments the rendered skin. I liked it on wings, but I think it would have been better on a smoked or at least grilled wing. It's bright and not sickly sweet, and I could really see this going well with grilled shrimp or even pork tacos.


CALYPSO

This sauce just went naturally with wings. It's like a classic hot wing sauce that's been leveled up several times because you have the heat (and it brings the heat!), but there is a depth of flavour that makes it stand out.  I really like the 'wicked' levels of heat but that it isn't all scotch bonnet (which isn't one of my favourite pepper flavours). The reaper helps kick up that heat but also flavour. And while I can't taste the clementine specifically, the nuance of the sweet is there. I would be tempted to add some melted butter but I also wouldn't want to erode the flavour of the sauce ...



I really enjoyed these sauces, but my clear favourite is Calypso. Both sauces you can taste the quality of the ingredients, the history and love that has gone into making them that only comes from small batch sauce. I'm reaching for Calypso more often for the full flavour heat. It's exactly as Ifoma put it - this isn't just 'ignorant' heat; it's smart and it's wicked! 

I've been using it in soups, on meatballs, even on popcorn. I like the way it burns and still tastes good. When I think of the sauce names and the feelings and flavour Wicked Smart sauces induces, it keeps reminding me of that Simpson's quote; "It's like there's a party in my mouth, and everyone's invited!" Go out and try it for yourself - I know I liked it. 




Wicked Smart Hot Sauces
@wickedsmarthot on Twitter


Where can one buy Wicked Smart?
Wicked Smart Hot Sauces can be purchased at Brady's Meats, T&J Seafood, the Little Mushroom Food Shoppe, Caudle’s Catch Seafood, The Little Green Grocery inc., Halenda's Oshawa, and directly from the website.




Thursday, 20 September 2018

President's Choice CAYENNE & SCOTCH BONNET WING SAUCE


When I'm at the grocery store, I always wonder down the condiment aisle just to see if a) any hot sauce is on sale b) there are any new hot sauce. Most times, neither is the case. 


But earlier this summer I was pleasantly surprised that there was a new sauce! President's Choice Cayenne & Scotch Bonnet Wing Sauce.


In general I'm not a big fan of scotch bonnet pepper sauces; I like the white hot blistering heat, but not the more fruity flavour of the pepper flesh. But with the cayenne in there, and it marketed as a 'wing sauce' and not just a hot sauce, I had to try it.


 I mean the bottle even says it is "Scorching" in the PC heat rating scale! And the fact that Hot Sauce and the Scotch Bonnet Peppers are listed near the top of the ingredients, it seemed pretty promising. When you open the jar, the smell is slightly sour, slightly vinegary, and slightly fruity. The look of the sauce is light orange.

Taking a taste, the sauce attacked the tip of my tongue. The heat was white, quick and stinging. I was shocked and surprised - this was actually a hot hot sauce after all! I used it on a few food products and the taste was kind of a watered down cayenne based hot sauce, with a big bite. I immediately knew this sauce would be great on a grilled wing.


At the moment we live in a condo/apartment building and have to use a communal BBQ grill. I got some charcoal on fire, and I was excited to get to use my cast iron sauce pot. I lobbed in some butter, and then added the hot sauce.


Once the sauce was heated thoroughly and mixed, I put it off to the side of the charcoals to keep it warm while the wings cooked.


For the wings, I brined them in water, vinegar, salt, and spices. Once the brine was done, I seasoned them with Frank's Dry Seasoning, paprika, salt, pepper, roasted garlic and spices. Once the coals were flaming hot, I put down my BBQ mat and let them cook.

This grilling pit is really hard to control the temperature so a few wings got a little more scorched through the mat than I had planned. The fire was HOT. In the above photo at the bottom you can see the fat and seasoning is bubbling (there is no sauce on those wings). I tried one just as it was (Level 1) and they were good. I could only imagine how with the sauce it would be.


I transferred the wings to cook directly on the grill and started to baste them up with the sauce. If this grill pit had a lid I wouldn't have bothered, but I wanted that skin to get direct smoke, as well as some flame kisses. But it was so hot and my basting brush was very small, my hand had a hard time reaching those back wings.


I took the wings off the grill after flipping and basting a few times. I tried them as they were (Level 2) ooh wow they were good. I could have just eaten them at this stage as is, but I wanted to go to Level 3 with these wings.


Level 3? Yes, lets sauce these wings up! Also keep in mind that at this point the sauce was picking up the smoke from the lump charcoal and growing that flavour as well.


The photo above is one of my favourite moments of wing eatery. It just looks so beautiful.



I sat outside at the picnic table and took it all in. The grilled, charred rubbed wings, basted in butter hot sauce, and slathered in more butter Cayenne & Scotch Bonnet sauce. This was a perfect summer moment.


Wow. Wow were these good. The flavour was ON POINT. Charred and smokey wings, buttery and spicy sauce - it was a match made in heaven. As mentioned before, the PC sauce is a bit watery on it's own, but you mix it in with butter and you've got a kicked up Buffalo Sauce. A worthy suicide for the average spice lover.

The only downside was the wings themselves. Despite brining them they were still tough and a bit chewy for my liking. I can't seem to get tender wings on this outdoor pit.


Would I get this sauce again? You bet. It has a nice flavour, but it also has a lot of heat. Good heat. This isn't a sauce I would use all the time; I'm not crazy about scotch bonnet sauce but the added cayenne makes it a more full flavoured sauce. What elevated this hot sauce was the addition of butter. And grilled smokey wings. So good. Well done President's Choice, well done.


PC Cayenne & Scotch Bonnet Wing Sauce
Presidentschoice.ca