Sriracha Recipe – Homemade Chili Hot Sauce
We hear there’s been a shortage of a particular brand of hot sauce. But no worries, we have a homemade version for you that’s been tried and true since we first published it in 2009. This Sriracha Recipe is customizable to your taste buds, whether it be more tangy, spicy, salty and savory, this homemade sriracha hot sauce recipe is super easy to make.

Sriracha Cult
Twitter got me into some trouble. Last week, I innocently twittered a photograph of some Vietnamese condiments for a Viet Nhậu (tapas) party we were having for one of our Supper Club Dinners. In that picture, there were some yummy, traditional Vietnamese toppings of scallion oil confit, fried crispy shallots and many more goodies I prepared for the evenings feast. But I never thought a simple Twitter mention of “homemade sriracha hot sauce” would cause such a commotion, create incessant demands for the recipe, and getting all the love and attention over the other toppings. I knew Sriracha style hot sauce was popular, but a cult following? Never. So yes, that’s what I’ll call it from now on, Cult Sriracha.

What is Sriracha?
When I first made this sauce a while back in 2009, I asked myself: What makes Huy Fong’s Sriracha, aka rooster sauce, this ubiquitous Asian, cock-labeled chili sauce so popular? Well, to start the term Sriracha originated in Thailand and is named after a town that become popular after a local woman made a bright and popular hot sauce. It was an adaptation from a classic Chinese hot sauce with garlic and red jalapeno peppers. Now, it’s become a world wide popular chili condiment in a squirt bottle. There’s a gazillion different brands out there on the market. But I myself, can confess to squeezing the dickens out of this bottle of orange/reddish gold goodness. It’s like a prized commodity when it hits the palate and gives incredible sensations of heat, sweet and tang. Sriracha has the perfect balance of all flavors: delicate spice combined with sweet and garlicky tangy undertones that make it perfect in almost any dish.
Video: Homemade Sriracha Hot Sauce Recipe:

Make Homemade Sriracha to Your Personal taste
Huy Fong’s Sriracha isn’t too spicy to where it will cause beads of sweat to roll down one’s face, nor is it claiming to be “hotter than a motha” and attempt to cause a brain concussion. Neither is it trying to break records with the million scoville scale mark, nor is it trying to keep you on the toilet for the entire morning after.
Being the fresh sauce addict that I am and loving to create outside the bottle, I wanted to re-create my own Sriracha recipe in my own kitchen and customize the spice/sweet/tang layers to my own preferences. I can take a little more heat in my sriracha recipe than most and I wanted to raise the spicy bar in the sauce to accommodate not just my own taste buds, but also for my chili loving friends. Give me more spice in my hot sauce and I’ll be a very, very good girl.
YOU MUST MAKE THIS SRIRACHA RECIPE. This is not only so easy, it’s so fresh tasting from all the fresh chilies! I was able to find the right balance of the sugar, vinegar and spice, all blended together to get the smooth, hot sauce consistency. Unlike some other chili sauces with the seeds and peels still coarsely evident, I used tomato sauce as the base to help blend the sauce together and keep it more like the Sriracha consistency. It’s smooth, pretty and delicious. This homemade chili sauce sings sweet and spicy songs in your mouth, while being kind to your body with the perfect amount of heat.
And we don’t find it necessary to push the sauce through a mesh strainer after blending (you can use a blender or food processor for blending). You can strain it after cooking if you want a super smooth sauce, but personally we prefer the slightly more textured sauce that comes straight out of the blender.
Easy Sriracha Recipe
As with any recipe, you can tailor this to your own palate to create your own version of the sauce. I know some folks like their hot sauce to counterbalance the heat with a little more sugar and some like more of the vinegary tang. Go for it and customize all those balancing elements to your body’s tolerance. Personally, I’ve added a touch (just a slight “Diane spicy style” touch) to my version for that extra little kick of heat.
Last but not least, please don’t skimp out on any of the ingredients, especially the fish sauce. The fish sauce adds the savory, salty and umami depth to this recipe. Without the fish sauce, this chili hot sauce doesn’t have the exciting umami layer of flavor that I can taste in the original Sriracha. For vegetarians, you can replace the fish sauce with a soy sauce. All of the listed ingredients come together beautifully to harmonize the flavor and texture of this hot sauce and without them, I wouldn’t dare call it “Sriracha style”.
And when you are cutting all the chilies by hand with your knife, we highly recommend using latex or nitrile gloves. It is too easy to spice up your hand and then forget and accidentally touch your eyes or some other sensitive area.
Hope this rocks your spicy hot sauce world and no more worries about the Sriracha shortage.
-Diane

Sriracha Recipe – Homemade Chili Sriracha Hot Sauce
Ingredients
- 1 cup (100 g) Thai red chili peppers *Start with less (about half) if you want a more mild, gentle hot sauce
- 1 Tablespoon (15 ml) Vegetable Oil
- 4-5 cloves Garlic , crushed or minced
- 3-4 medium Shallots , minced (@ 1/2 cup minced)
- 15 ounces (425 g) Tomato Sauce (@ 1 3/4 cups)
- 1 Tablespoon (15 ml) Fish Sauce (don’t skimp out on this!) or use Soy Sauce, if you can, try to use the Fish Sauce.
- 3 Tablespoons (45 ml) Rice Vinegar
- 3 Tablespoons (45 ml) Sugar
Equipment
- Canning Jars optional
- Canning Funnel optional
Instructions
- Using gloves over your hands, remove stems of chili peppers, rinse clean. Blot dry with paper towel. Wearing rubber gloves, mince the chili peppers. The smaller the cut, the smoother your final sauce will be.

- In sauce pan, heat oil then add minced garlic and shallots. Over medium heat, saute for about 2-3 minutes or until light brown and fragrant (don't burn your garlic!)

- Add tomato sauce and minced chili peppers. Add fish sauce, vinegar, and sugar. Mix well. Let sauce come to a simmer then lower heat to keep at a low simmer.

- Continue simmering sauce for about 5 minutes. This will break down the skin of the chili peppers and soften them to create the smooth consistency.

- Remove from heat and allow to cool completely.

- Transfer sauce to blender and blend until smooth or until most of the chili pepper skin and seeds break down – preferably on the “liquefy” mode.

- Taste the hot sauce. Further customize the hot sauce to your liking: adding more sugar, vinegar or water if you desire. Blend one last time until smooth. Pour into clean, air tight jar and refrigerate. Use within about 4 weeks.

Video
Nutrition Information per Serving
How to Store Homemade Hot Sauce?
I like to keep all my homemade hot sauces in airtight containers like mason jars or weck jars. I eat it frequently and don’t often store it for more than 4 weeks in the fridge. It must be stored in the fridge! If you don’t eat it quick enough after about a month, I would suggest sharing it or gifting it. Making a big batch means you can give away these jars of hot sauce as gifts. Think Christmas!
More Vietnamese Recipes that are Family Inspired
Here’s my personal recipe for Vietnamese Fish Sauce Dip and click here for all our popular Vietnamese Recipes that are sometimes traditional and definitely sometimes not.
Sriracha Cookbooks and More!
Awesome and beyond, here’s some goods for the Sriracha lover!
Awesome Sauce T-shirt – It is and we love it!
The Sriracha Cookbook by Randy Clemens – Take your Sriracha love to new heights. You’ll put find new ways to spread the love.
The Veggie-Lover’s Sriracha Cookbook by Randy Clemens – A follow-up to his other hit cookbook. Give your veggies a little zing!More Easy Sriracha Recipes:
- Sriracha shrimp cocktail
- Sticky sriracha chicken wings
- Spicy sriracha roast chicken with sriracha gravy
- White bean dip that’s sriracha spicy
- Honey sriracha glazed chicken wings
- This recipe was originally published in 2009









oh my! so happy I found this!!! or that you shared this with us! 😛
This recipe sounds delicious. Is there any substitution for the fish sauce or soy sauce to reduce the sodium. I am on a sodium free way of life. Thanks
Hi Lissa,
The only way we can think of that will get close is too find a low sodium fish sauce. Sodium Girl may have a better solution than we do. Sorry we couldn’t be more of a help but it isn’t an area of expertise for us. Good luck!
T & D
So excited. I had mountains of peppers last summer left over. So now I have a massive amount of dried peppers. I was thinking for those who can not eat a whole jar in a week or two, freeze it in ice trays and pop one out when you start running low. My aunt does this with pesto (you can put a cube right into the hot noodles. so easy!) and I figure it would work with the Sriracha. Thanks for the recipe. Love the Weck jars too.
You have done it once again…. upped the game…
I’d like to know just which chiles huy fong uses in their sauces. this NYT article suggests ripe red jalapeños: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/20/dining/20united.html?pagewanted=all
We don’t know what chilies he uses. Just as he mentions that his isn’t a Thai sriracha, but his own sriracha, our recipe isn’t Huy Fong’s but is our own. If we were you, we’d experiment with different chilies until you find the flavor you like best. Good luck.
T & D
I love sriracha but I don’t think I could eat that sauce within a week. I like it in every soup, in every shrimp dish, a dash here, a squirt there. Especially helpful when you have the flu or cold. I think it has its own healing properties.
we had no idea what to do with the beautiful chilies our neighbors gave us- until i remembered i’d bookmarked this recipe from so long ago! just finished and we LOVE it! great recipe (as usual!)!
I just made this sauce. I is so delicious. I did make a few changes. I could not find Thai red chilies so I just used a mixture of some other red chili peppers, jalapenos and serrano chilies. Also, I added a whole lot more garlic. This was so fantastic that my husband was eating it like crazy and he usually doesn’t like things like this. You get a really nice sweet taste at first then you get hit with the most amazing spicy heat that is very addictive. We ate it last night with buffalo burgers and then today with spring rolls.
Thank you so much for this recipe!!!
I recently found your site, it’s wonderful. Question though. I found 2 different recipes for Vietnamese style carrot and daikon pickles. One calls for 3 C water and 3 T vinegar and the other calls for 1 C water and 1 C vinegar. Are these correct quantities for the individual recipes? The one doesn’t seem to have enough vinegar. I really want to try these but want to make sure I make them correctly. Thanks
They are just two diff styles. The first we wrote is our home recipe, the second is one we liked out of a cookbook. Try small batches of each and see which you like better or adjust to your own taste. That’s what we do.
Why didnt you blend the sauce while it was hot:
blending hot makes smoother sauce.
I am sure of this.
Not worth the atomic scald! Plus this is a sauce which is we don’t need particularly smooth. The touch of texture is nice.
I am going to try and can this when the peppers come into season. Will let you know how it works out.
Thanks for the inspiration on this one. I made a slight variation this afternoon and it was great. I doubled the garlic and instead of tomatoes I used roasted red bell and long peppers. I also added a dollop of shrimp paste.
I love your Sriracha recipe. I must confess, I’m an addict for the stuff too.
I have my own wing sauce that I make with Sriracha, Soy Sauce, black pepper. It is an outstanding flavor that is not too hot, with just enough kick and a touch of Asian flavor.
Regards,
Rob
Product Review Ratings
Bookmarked this recipe months ago. Waited until I could get fresh-off-the-vine red Thai chilies. Stirred it up as directed. Seasoned the pureed final product to my taste with more vinegar, fish sauce, and sugar. And voila… it turned out fantastic. So simple yet so delicious! Thanks for posting this recipe.
Neel – glad it turned out well for you. I like that you added more vinegar and fish sauce!
Loved the recipe. I used all fresh ingredients from our garden,even the garlic. After making it once using your recipe,I tweeked it a little for my own tastes. I upped the garlic and omitted two Table spoons of sugar and replaced with a whole red bell pepper. Was perfect for my own tastes,sweet as well and the color was more red and less orange. Thanks again for giving us the basics to making this addiction at home.
This sauce reminded me of Hainan Chicken Rice. I sure missed dipping the chicken in it! I’d been looking around for this Sriracha sauce for cooking of Thai’s Red Curry recipe for some time now. I can’t find the recipe for this paste. Thank you for sharing this info! 🙂