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Reverse engineering the recipe for Nica-style ketchup

LigaPrivadaFanboy

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One of the simple little differences from American food I picked up in Nica on the BOTL Safari was how freaking awesome the ketchup was there. On everything - eggs, meat, and especially french fries! The color/smell/texture is the same as Heinz ketchup in the US, but it's sweeter, and there's a certain twang to it...not spicy but definitely something else there.

Yesterday I picked up a 3/4lb burger w/ bacon and a ton of fries - convinced I had enough materials to experiment with, I headed home to give it a shot. Luckily my wife was watching some travel channel show about Nica food (Nick Menillo from Drew Estate even had a 3s cameo, lol) and it turns out there's some dishes in Managua that use a honey+simple syrup reduction as a sauce. "EUREKA!" I thought.

So here's where I started:
1 cup ketchup
1 TBSP honey
1 TBSP simple syrup

NO! That was way too much honey. Too thick, too sweet, no twang.

Next up:
1 cup ketchup
1 tsp honey
1 TBSP simple syrup

Better, but still no love here. Needs something else. I know! PAIN!



1 tsp of Ghost Chili Sauce turned everything into



Holy shit! This made the burger and fries taste 100x better than with regular ketchup. There was a sweetness, a pop, and a twang, followed by a tiny bit of spice.



Close enough for me, for now. I did find a honey syrup recipe online today which has a lot of lemon zest in it. This is probably the next test, but the ghost chili sauce is gonna stay!
 

NickThePyro

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This sounds delicious! I got bored of normal ketchup years ago and have been using weird concoctions of hot sauce ranging from Franks RedHot to over a million scouville unit extract. But a sweet and savory ketchup with some spice will have to be tried out now. Thanks for the idea!
 
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