Yeahhhhhhhhhh!!!!!! It's fall and that means homemade Chili Sauce! The tangy, sweet, spicy condiment that makes pork, potato pancakes and chicken come ALIVE. Well, not technically "alive". That would be quite scary.
If you can chop vegetables, simmer something on the stove and happen to have a working nose you CAN make chili sauce. It's full of chunky vegetables and wintery spices like cloves, brown sugar and cinnamon with the added heat of CAYENNE.
So about that nose thing ... several years go I got sinusitis. One of the symptoms of it is not being able to smell anything. Great for walking through garbage juice puddles at the dump, but not so great when making chili sauce. The thing about creating great food is you need to taste as you go. Even if you're using a recipe. And the thing about tasting is you need your sense of smell to get a good idea of how things taste. So I made my sinusitis chili sauce and had no idea how it tasted. I dragged it around for all of my friends and relatives to taste and got a unanimous decision.
It was gross.
Bland I believe was the actual word. I pulled the spice bag out too early. So as you make this and let it simmer don't be afraid to adjust things. The inability to adjust is my main complaint about the stupid Instant Pot by the way. You can read my complete unbiased review of how much I don't like the Instant Pot here.
Shot of a rare museum quality artifact - the recipe card.
You may be asking yourself why now Karen? Why NOW? Because now (around the end of summer) is when you're going to find the fresh ingredients for everything you need to make it.
Everything that goes into chili sauce is in season in late summer.
Table of Contents
What's in Chili Sauce
This isn't the thin runny, condiment you see in the grocery storey. It's a hearty, full of fruit and vegetables concoction that's more like a chutney.
- Tomatoes
- Celery
- Banana Peppers
- Red Peppers
- Onions
- Garlic
- Peaches
As far as spices and flavourings go you have brown sugar, cloves, cinnamon and cayenne pepper.
Honestly all you do is rough chop a bunch of vegetables, throw them in a pot and let 'em simmer. If you can't manage that then I'm so sorry to hear you're in a coma. Get well.
Ready for this old timey, vintage, sweet and spicy chili sauce recipe? Good. I'm proud you were able to shake yourself out of that coma.
What to Eat it With
- Eggs
- Chicken
- Pork
- Fritters
- On potato pancakes. - which is my FAVOURITE way to eat it.
Canning Chili Sauce
- Fill a large stock pot with water and bring to a boil.
- Bring sauce to a boil if it isn't already.
- Fill washed, hot pint jars with hot chili sauce, leaving ½" head space.
- Wipe rims, put lids and screw rings on. Finger tighten the rings.
- Process in a hot water bath making sure they are submerged with at least 2" of water over them.
- Process for 20 minutes. Start timing the 20 minutes once the water has returned to boiling after putting all your jars in.
- Remove jars from the water bath using a jar lifter and set on the counter undisturbed until you hear the satisfying "pop" of them sealing.
To make canning less of a pain (literally) get one of these cheap canning kits that have a jar lifter, a funnel, tongs and everything else you need for canning.
The Recipe
Chili Sauce
Ingredients
- 18 quarts tomatoes
- 2 bunches celery
- 3 quarts banana peppers
- 10 red peppers
- 12 onions
- 6 cloves garlic
- ¼ cup coarse salt
- 4 cups vinegar
- 4 peaches
- 2.5 lbs brown sugar
- 2 tsps. cayenne pepper
- 3 tsps. cloves
- 3 tsps. cinnamon
- 2 whole cinnamon sticks
- 10 whole cloves
Instructions
- Peel tomatoes by placing them in boiling water for 30 seconds and then plunging them into cold water. The skin will slide right off. If it doesn't, plunge them in the hot water again.
- Wrap all the whole spices in a little cheesecloth bag.
- Rough chop the remaining ingredients. Don't worry about it being pretty, just chop them up into pieces between ¼" - ½".
- Put all the ingredients into a large stock pot and bring to a boil. Once boiling, reduce heat to a simmer and simmer until thick and reduced by ⅓rd. This will take many hours. 5-10 hours depending on the type of tomatoes you use.
- Taste as you go! If after 3 hours you find you like the taste of it, then remove the spice bag and continue to simmer until thickened. I always leave my spice bag in until the end though.
Notes
- Prepare a water bath.
- Fill canning jars with hot chili sauce then put on sealer and band.
- Process for 20 minutes in water bath.
Nutrition
This recipe makes a HUGE batch so either half it or plan on preserving it.
Pro tip? Do not attempt this while suffering from sinusitis.
→Follow me on Instagram where I often make a fool of myself←
Patti
So sweet you read my ramblings and responded ... I'm triple blessed ... got Canada backing me! Just so you know, my dear, grandpa Jeanne Pierre Comeau was born in Nova Scotia! Never got his American status cause only a midwife (long dead) could confirm his birth. So I'm kinda a Canadian! Well hell, I love it!
Wendy
I seem to not know how to spell corderoy. Or "ex-boyfriend."
Wendy
Okay. So here's my thing with chili sauce:
When I was kid in the late 70's/early 80's my mum had a boyfriend who canned his own chili sauce. He also carried around a man purse with all his newspapers in it, and his information for his various sports pools. He and my mum made matching caftans, and they sewed up a giant beenbag "snake" out of brown corderoi filled with those little bean bag beans that got everywhere.
He was an eccentric guy, who watched hockey, but also got me interested in the shows "Hill Street Blues" and "WKRP in Cincinatti." I did and do think well of him.
He canned his own chili sauce. It was awesome. On scrambled eggs. (Note: I feel very strongly against ketchup on scrambled eggs--ugh.)
It is very unlikely that I will be making my own. I love your blog, Karen, but I know my own limitations. I will not be making chili sauce.
But boy, did your post get me thinking about my mum's wonderful oex-boyfriend, and what a good almost step-dad he was, in all his eccentricities.
Jenny
Your comment made me smile! He sounded like an interesting guy with a man purse.
Ps....I eat ketchup with everything....especially eggs! :X :D
Cussot
Aww, so sweet, Wendy. I can hear the theme songs, feel the corduroy and oh look, there's a styrofoam bean clinging to my shirt, damnit. Thanks for the story.
christine
Tortiere, baby!
Pat
Tortiere is a GOOD idea. Or on samosas from the Samosa Lady at the farmers' market. MMMMMMM.
Rondina
Like Annie, I'm confused as to what all this chili sauce will be used for. I can see it being used in scrabbled eggs, on hamburgers, or hot dogs---but this will hardly use up the batch. Are you using this as a base for chili?
A side question. What kind of camera are you using? Your pictures are always great.
Shauna
I'm glad I'm not the only one to ask - inquiring minds want to know...how do we use chili sauce? It looks delicious and I imagine using it on hot dogs, hamburgers...maybe steak? What else? Is there a common way to use it?
Nancy Blue Moon
Good on hot dogs and burgers right?? It looks good anyway!
christine
Do you think you could do this in a slow cooker? I have a fear of canning, so would just give away jars to people to be used ASAP. LOL
Karen
If you slow cooker can simmer with the lid off then you can slow cook it. You'd also need QUITE a large slow cooker. It'll stay good in the fridge for at least a couple of months. ~ karen!
Vicky
This sounds like a salsa recipe. I defintely will be trying it.
toekneetoni
it sounds delicious. at the risk of sounding silly i want to ask, how do you use it other than whipping up a batch of chili? i mean as creative as you are, i'm sure you use it in a variety of ways. please share.
Ev
Thanks Karen. This recipe is safely ensconced in "The List", my large recipe file on computer. Recently spent waaay too much time tweaking it. Many of your recipes are there, and thanks for that!
My tomato crop was miserable this year, so no sauce. Maybe someday....
Feral Turtle
Yummy! Forwarded your link to my sister......You never know, we might score some chili sauce for Christmas!
Edith
Hi Karen,
What the heck is Chili Sauce and what do you do with it? It looks like a condiment. Does it go IN things or ON things? I'm down here in Texas where Chili recipes abound but I've never heard of Chili Sauce. Is it a Canadian thing like Vegemite for the Australians?
Karen
Hi Edith - It *is* a condiment. It actually has nothing to do with chili, LOL. It can be used like a chutney with chicken or pork and is great on potato pancakes or eggs. ~ karen!
RosieW
Dani, you keep what you'll use, then make others happy by gifting the rest. I sure welcome these gifts.
Annie
I have never understood chili sauce. Can anyone explain?
Do you use it like ketchup? Or salsa? or just sauce?
How do you use chili sauce? Are there rules?
This recipe looks so tastey! I imagine having it with eggs. Is that weird? Ok hungry now.
Thanks Karen!
Ab
Karen
Nope, not weird at all! That's how a lot of people use this chili sauce! ~ karen
Adrienne
This looks like a great gift. Anything that has to cook that long seems like a magical experiment, and to me that equals fun. If I were to put suggestions for how to use the sauce on a card for recipients, what would be your favorite suggestions? I suspect this would be best used on beef, poultry, or pork, but I'm one if those pescatarian types and didn't use super spicy stuff back when I wasn't, so some recommendations would be much appreciated.
Also, if we don't fully can it, any idea how long it would last in the fridge once opened?
Thanks!
Karen
Adrienne! My favourite way to have this is on potato pancakes. It's also great with chicken (like a chutney), pork or with eggs. My mother particularly loves it with eggs! No idea how long it would last in the fridge, but I know I've had some in my fridge for several months and still used it. i'm not sure if I should recommend doing that or not though, LOL. ~ karen
mimiindublin
Marti has it in 1!
I love your recipe card for its little blotches, reminds me of that saying about an Italian kitchen-something about shouldn't be too clean cos that's a sign you don't cook!
I just bottled a batch of tomato and vanilla chutney, sounds weird to me but recipe came from a reliable source. Suggests you eat it with ricotta.
Kim
"No need to be pretty about it. I mean, you can be pretty while you're doing it..."
Loved this! Made me guffaw! Ok, maybe not guffaw. But definitely an audible chuckle.
Dani @ lifeovereasy
This looks delicious. Not sure what I would do with 15 jars of chili sauce, but it's better than having 35 jars of red pepper jelly which is what happened with my chili peppers last year. This might just be the year of the chili sauce in my house.
Marti
Karen, I just want you to know that you are the ONLY person I know who would start a blog post about homemade chili sauce by discussing her sinusitis.
And certainly the only person I know whose recipe post with such an enticing first line would I ever read.
I'm not even sure I like chili sauce, but I may try this recipe...in spite of both of us.
Karen
LOL. Wait'll my next recipe post when I discuss my cat's weepy eye.
Kim
lol!
Patti
Lord you make me laugh out loud ... and proud I might add! I'm the South Carolina rattle snake lady. Guess good things come from bad times. Now it is confirmed I have friends in my neighborhood .... bless them, they check on me daily now! As a single "mature" woman, with kids grown and out of the nest, I kind of retreated into my big empty house. But, that damn rattler reunited me with people ... my loving neighbors, who came with shovels and hoes in hand to protect me. Kinda like a scene from Frankenstein ... without the torches ... it was day time!
Karen
Neighbours can be as important as family Patti! Glad they circled around you. ~ karen!
Ms Mathieu
I am going to give this a try ,thanks