Umami-heavy starters redefine the early wings Season 30 of Hot Ones kicks off by prioritizing complex fermentation over raw heat. The lead-off sauce, **That’s What Shashidito Said** from Down to Ferment, signals a shift toward gourmet profiles. By incorporating roasted shashito peppers with **kombucha**, miso, and black garlic, it offers a sophisticated "Nou" vibe that challenges the traditional vinegar-forward opening. This is followed by Good Heat’s **Hot Bine**, a Montreal-based creation that uses eggplant and roasted tomato to create a rich, veggie-forward explosion. These selections prove that the culinary team values depth and texture as much as Scoville ratings. Global influences dominate the middle gauntlet The mid-tier sauces transport the palate across the Caribbean. Hot and Saucy returns with **Peles and Scorpion**, a sauce inspired by traditional Caribbean pickled relish. It uses a puckery blend of cabbage, sour orange, and habanero to provide a comfort-food foundation. Sean Evans then introduces **Tropical Amaro**, which balances the sweetness of pineapple and mango against the bright, citrusy sting of **Scotch Bonnet** and Fatali peppers. These sauces are not just condiments; they are explorations of heritage through high-heat produce. Sinister staples and the final descent into fire As the gauntlet reaches its peak, the focus shifts to pure intensity. The eighth spot remains occupied by Da' Bomb Beyond Insanity, a sauce Sean Evans describes as a "toxic love" that guests dread. However, the true pinnacle is The Last Dab: Thermageddon. Crafted by Smokin' Ed Currie, this blend utilizes four of the most lethal peppers on Earth: **Pepper X**, Apollo, Carolina Reaper, and Scorpion. It is a masterful, if terrifying, demonstration of pepper breeding and capsaicin concentration. The Dirty 30 bird tradition continues Reaching thirty seasons is a monumental milestone in food media. This "Dirty 30" lineup represents a maturation of the brand, blending veteran favorites like the **Pickled Garlic Sriracha** with experimental newcomers. The inclusion of ingredients like **sumac** and **chickpea** in Blackeyed Susan’s **Chipotle** shows a willingness to pull from Mediterranean and Middle Eastern pantries. This season promises to be a celebration of how far hot sauce craft has come, moving from simple heat to legitimate gastronomical art.
Smokin' Ed Currie
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- 6 hours ago