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  1. How To Make Homemade Hot Sauce Recipes - Yahoo Recipe Search

    How to Make Homemade Barbecue Sauce
    The Pioneer Woman
    Barbecue sauce is one of the best parts of grilling season—but do you know how easy it is to make homemade barbecue sauce? Get the best BBQ sauce recipe here.
    How to Make Hot Sauce
    The Pioneer Woman
    If you are a hot sauce lover, you need this simple, homemade recipe that you can make as hot or as mild as you like.
    Homemade Hoisin Sauce
    Allrecipes
    Learn how to make hoisin sauce with easy ingredients. This sweet and spicy sauce is awesome on chicken and beef recipes that normally call for barbeque sauce.
    Easy Homemade Chocolate Sauce
    Allrecipes
    Easy to make chocolate sauce. If you are a regular buyer of store-bought chocolate sauce and didn't realize how simple it is to make your own at home, then I hope you give this recipe a try. Pour hot over ice cream or cool and store in airtight containers in the refrigerator.
    Classic Chicken Pot Pie
    Pillsbury.com
    What is Chicken Pot Pie? We call it a delicious excuse to eat pie for dinner! It’s your leftover cooked chicken or turkey and frozen mixed veggies in a buttery, rich sauce; all tucked inside flaky pie pastry. With all these flavors and textures going on, you’ll get requests to serve it often! <br>This classic dinner pie is one of our top-rated recipes—EVER--and with good reason. It is so easy to make and very comforting to eat. You can have a hot, homemade dinner pie ready to dive into in just over an hour.</br> <br>Whether you make it for a comforting weeknight meal or enjoy it over dinner with friends or family, this simple and hearty dish is always welcomed! The silky-smooth and flavorful sauce holds chicken or turkey and veggies inside a flaky crust. Break through the top crust and dive into the inside or savor the crust after you enjoy the yummy filling. No matter how you like to eat it, this pie will be devoured.</br> <br>It’s a perfect way to use up leftover turkey after a holiday feast…or you could make extra chicken, next time you have chicken for dinner…to have enough left over for this scrumptious dinner pie later in the week!</br>
    Ed's Mother's Meatloaf
    Food Network
    I have a perfectly justifiable weakness for any recipe that comes to me passed on through someone else's family. This is not just sentimentality; I hope not even sentimentality, actually, since I have always been contemptuously convinced that sentimentality is the refuge of those without proper emotions. Yes, I do infer meaning from the food that has been passed down generations and then entrusted to me, but think about it: the recipes that last, do so for a reason. And on top of all that, there is my entrancement with culinary Americana. I just hear the word meatloaf and I feel all old world, European irony and corruption seep from me as I will myself into a Thomas Hart Benton painting. And then I eat it: the dream is dispelled and all I'm left with is a mouthful of compacted, slab-shaped sawdust and major, major disappointment. So now you understand why I am so particularly excited about this recipe. It makes meatloaf taste like I always dreamt it should. Even though this is indeed Ed's Mother's Meatloaf, the recipe as is printed below is my adaptation of it. My father-in-law always used to tell a story about asking his mother for instructions on making pickles. "How much vinegar do I need?" he asked. "Enough", she answered. Ed's mother's recipe takes a similar approach; I have added contemporary touches, such as being precise about measurements. But for all that, cooking can never be truly precise: bacon will weigh more or less, depending on how thickly or thinly it is sliced, for example. And there are many other similar examples: no cookbook could ever be long enough to contain all possible variants for any one recipe. But what follows are reliable guidelines, you can be sure of that. I do implore you, if you can, to get your meat from a butcher. I have made this recipe quite a few times, comparing mincemeat that comes from the butcher and mincemeat that comes from various supermarkets and there is no getting round the fact that freshly minced butcher's meat is what makes the meatloaf melting (that, and the onions, but the onions alone can't do it). The difficulty with supermarket mince is not just the dryness as you eat, but the correlation which is that the meatloaf has a crumblier texture, making it harder to slice. I am happy just to have the juices that drip from the meatloaf as it cooks as far as gravy goes, and not least because the whole point of this meatloaf for me is that I can count on a good half of it to eat cold in sandwiches for the rest of the week. (And you must be aware, it is my duty to make you aware, that a high-sided roasting tin makes for more juices than a shallow one.) But if you wanted to make enough gravy to cover the whole shebang hot, then either make an onion gravy and pour the meat juices in at the end or fashion a quick stovetop BBQ gravy. By that, I mean just get out a saucepan, put in it 1.76 ounces/50g dark muscovado sugar, 4.23 ounces/125ml beef stock, 4 tablespoons each of Dijon mustard, soy sauce, tomato paste or puree and redcurrant jelly and 1 tablespoon red wine vinegar, to taste. Warm and whisk and pour into a jug to serve. Ed instructed me to eat kasha with this, which is I imagine how his mother served it, but I really feel that if you haven't grown up on kasha - a kind of buckwheat polenta - then you will all too easily fail to see its charm. I can't see any argument against mashed potato, save the lazy one, but I don't mind going cross-cultural and making up a panful of polenta; I use the instant kind, but replace the water that the packet instructions advise with chicken stock. And as with the beef stock needed for the gravy suggested above, I am happy for this to be bought rather than homemade.