Pukka Sauce has been one of my favorite hot sauces for a while. I use it primarily as a table sauce, but I’ve added a few dollops to my cooking from time to time. While it’s certainly not a mild sauce by any stretch of imagination, it’s also not a super duper third degree burns on your tongue style sauce. For the purposes of this review, I put it through four tests of taste, and here are the results:
1. Direct application
The old toothpick dipped in, applied to tongue test. Because the sauce is based on Scotch Bonnet Peppers, Pukka Sauce packs a (pleasant) punch. The sensation never quite passes into the pain spectrum, although it does flirt with it, depending on the size of the dollop on your toothpick. Most long time chileheads will be able to tolerate and enjoy this sauce with no problems. People new to the hot sauce experience should probably keep a glass of milk and a slice of white bread handy, just in case.
2. Sprinkled on Cheese Fries
Pukka Sauce did really well in this test. The slight sweetness of the sauce is balanced perfectly by the tart vinegar, which reacts to the cheese on the fries, and makes an ooey gooey spicy treat to remember. Delicious!
3. Used in a sandwich
This is the one area I felt that Pukka Sauce kind of let me down on. On most hot sandwiches it did quite well, as most hot sauces will, but on a cold turkey and muenster sandwich (whole grain bread), the sauce was entirely too sweet, making the flavor of the sandwich all wrong for me.
4. Used in my secret Hot Sauce Showcase recipe
A bit of explanation is necessary here. Growing up one of my favorite dishes in India was Rajma. It’s kind of a vegetarian chili that’s spicy, but not really hot. When I moved to the US, I tried to learn to make it myself, with disastrous results. Over the last eight years I’ve modified the original recipe a great deal, making it kind of a cross between rajma and chili, and one of the things it’s really good for is to explore what a hot sauce will do to your dish if added when still cooking.
Anyway, Pukka Sauce worked wonderfully in this recipe because of the underlying sweet/tart flavor that blends well into the dish. Usually I have to sweeten the dish artificially (it’s not a sweet dish, but the sugar adds to the complexity of flavor), but that was not required here. The only down side was that I had to add quite a lot of Pukka Sauce to get the dish to the level of heat I like.
Texture and Consistency: The sauce has a vaguely jelly like texture, although it’s still very pourable. I’m not entirely convinced of its consistency from batch to batch. The very first bottle I had was given to me by a friend of mine, and had a white cap. In this one, the heat definitely scored well over the secondary flavors of sweet and tart. The next couple of bottles have had black caps, and haven’t been quite as hot. The one I have right now is not as sweet as the one before, but considerably less hot than the first one. So try a couple of bottles before you make up your mind on this one.
Overall Impression: Good for direct application and cooking in dishes that need a sweet/tart flavor. This sauce is also great as an addition to tomato based pasta sauces, both during cooking and as a table addition while serving. Not so good in a sandwich, and not mind blowingly hot. Good sauce for beginners who have just learned they like and can tolerate hot sauce, and now would like to go on to the next step.
Bottle Descriprion: Crushed scotch bonnet pepper sauce, extra hot and fiery. Use with discretion.
Bonus Bottle Description: In the 19th century, Jamaican Bushas would celebrate their prowess in the saddle by lavish entertaining when they would vie with one another to see whose cook could serve the hottest dishes. Busha Browne’s Authentic (Pukka) Hot Pepper Sauce was originally used as a table sauce and in the preparation of traditional ‘hot’ dishes. Today, pukka pepper sauce also has special application in creole and cajun cooking.
Ingredients: Water, Scotch Bonnet Peppers, Cane Vinegar, Modified Food Starch, Salt, Approved Spices, Grapefruit Seed Extract.
Chilehead Comments: 5 Comments
Posted by: Thyla - Categories: Hot Sauce Reviews, Reviews
Permalink: Busha Browne’s Pukka Hot Pepper Sauce
HSB readers - Say hello to Thyla, the first female reviewer on the HotSauceBlog.com - besides the infamous wife. Thyla will be reviewing hot sauces as well as any spicy foods she encounters along the way.
Hiya Gang!
My name is Thyla, and I am one of the snazzy new guest bloggers at the Hot Sauce Blog. Like all my fellow guest bloggers, I too, am addicted to Hot Sauce and spicy food.
I tend to enjoy exotic cuisines and flavors, thanks to my upbringing, most of which happened in India. I belong to that rare minority of women who don’t have a sweet tooth. It’s probably because I burned the sweet-receptors right off with my first swig of hot sauce. My parents tell me that my favorite treat as a toddler was raw onion. (How they figured this one out will be covered in great detail with a suitably expensive therapist.)
I live in northern NJ with my husband who is utterly convinced that there’s something medically wrong with me because “…no one can eat all that capsaicin without seriously damaging something.” I tell him to take comfort in the fact that unlike all his male friends, he never has to buy me chocolate when he screws up. A bottle of hot sauce will do.
We share our home with a 3 year old Great Dane who is also addicted to Hot Sauce. You might be wondering why and how. Here’s what happened…
So, back when Trip was a puppy, he kind of liked to chew things. And by things I mean windowsills, coffee tables, the odd nightstand, etc. Like most new puppy parents. the first thing we did was to go out and buy a bottle of bitter apple. I then spend two days coating all the remotely chewable surfaces in the house with bitter apple. Trip didn’t even notice it. We then called the vet, who told us to try putting hot sauce on things.
I did.
He noticed it, and he LIKED it. He stopped chewing for about a day, during which time he licked all the hot sauce off of everything. Since then, we haven’t been able to trust him around any spicy food or stray bottles of hot sauce. To this day, whenever I want to eat something spicy, I have to first trick him into going to the basement so that we don’t have to make yet another emergency trip to our increasingly richer vet. Trip’s current favorite hot sauce is Cholula, mostly because it comes with a wooden cap that’s really fun to chew.
I’m starting to think about putting a lock on my fridge.
Chilehead Comments: 2 Comments
Posted by: Thyla - Categories: Hot Sauce Stuff
Permalink: Thyla and Her Crazy Dog


















