Pizza night is always a favorite, especially when you have great tasting pizza from some of the most popular restaurants.
Some-Like-It-Hot Sauce
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- #57448

ingredients
2 pounds of your favorite fresh hot peppers (You can use a single variety or mix them)
3 cups distilled white vinegar (5% acidity)
2 teaspoons pickling salt*
directions
Wearing disposable, powder free, latex, protective gloves, cut the peppers in half, remove and discard the membranes and seeds.
Using a food processor, finely chop the peppers and put them in a large pot.
Add the vinegar and salt.
Simmer gently for 5 minutes over medium heat. (Open all the doors and windows and turn your stove's vent fan on "high"!)
Using a wide mouth plastic funnel, ladle the mixture into a large heatproof sterilized glass jar or several small heatproof sterilized glass jars with non-corrosive lids.
Store the bottles in a cool dark place for one year.
When you are ready to make your sauce, force the pepper mixture through a food mill fitted with the small disk to remove the pepper skins and any seeds. Using a small mouth plastic funnel, ladle the sauce in small sterilized glass jars or bottles.
It will keep indefinitely in your refrigerator.
Victoria's Notes: *You can find pickling salt at your supermarket in the spice aisle or in the canning supplies section of most major discount stores.
added by
Victoria Wesseler, CDKitchen Staff
Read more: A Passion For Peppers
nutrition data
Nutritional data has not been calculated yet.It may look like a sad little package shoved in the back of your freezer, but frozen spinach actually has a lot of culinary uses (and some may surprise you).
Beer makes batters better, meat more tender, and sauces more flavorful.

reviews & comments
September 9, 2013
Used a combo of hatch and jalapenos. I think I'll experiment with other peppers and ratios to get it just the right "heat" level.