When I first tried Buffalo wings, way back in the early 90s, I distinctly remember a whiff of sharp vinegar arising from the basket of wings and I loved it. Alas, I rarely see vinegar in wing sauce recipes these days. I am a devotee of Frank's hot sauce and will add a teaspoon of two of vinegar to my wings this Super Bowl, but...what say y'all about vinegar in wing sauce?
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Wings and...Vinegar?
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I worked for a company HQ’d in Buffalo in the mid to late 80’s. “Buffalo Wings” were a new thing then and primarily unheard of outside the region. They were definitely different than what is offered today and I recall a hint of vinegar also. Whenever I was there for business I brought back a batch for my wife. There was a hotel restaurant that actually delivered the wings plane side. They drove a van full of prepacked, fully cooked, and still hot wings by the dozen right on the tarmac and took orders going plane to plane. Different times….
Anyway, I liked the little touch of vinegar in the sauce. I had forgotten about it.
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The first time I had chicken wings was an appetizer my mom made way back in the '60's (when I was just a lad). It seems like there were various versions of "Chinese" wings (often soy sauce based; teriyaki, orange chicken, ...). Long predating the Buffalo Wing era. Regarding vinegar, seems like Buffalo Wild Wings has some kind of Salt & Vinegar offering, maybe added onto the regular varieties? Never tried it.
Don't see why any one of the many possible vinaigrette-like marinades couldn't be used as a wing sauce. Time to experiment!
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Ingredients- ⅔ cup hot pepper sauce (such as Frank's RedHot®)
- ½ cup cold unsalted butter
- 1 ½ tablespoons white vinegar
- ÂĽ teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
- ÂĽ teaspoon cayenne pepper
- â…› teaspoon garlic powder
- salt to taste
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Willy Way back in the early 90's....Geez, seems like yesterday right?? Anyhow Buffalo Wings were newer on the bar scene as I remember...I was in my early 20's back then, so memory is a very subjective thing...Lol.. I do remember there was a bar on Lincoln Ave Called BW3....(Buffalo Wings 3) I remember the wings there being very tart more so than hot...That was as I recall my first introduction to Buffalo Wings. Hard for me to say, but I think you are right...I think the "Hot" novelty came after the vinegary, spicy, and a little sweet wings they called Buffalo Wings.
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I also like a wing sauce with a vinegar kick from time to time.
I have made the sauce from this recipe a couple of times and really like it, it's not super vinegary but you can definitely taste it. https://howtobbqright.com/2018/02/22...xchickenwings/
I have found a bunch of other sauce recipes that are based around hot sauce and vinegar. Here is one I found here on the Pit I want to try. https://pitmaster.amazingribs.com/fo...alo-wing-sauce
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Vinegar makes sense as an ingredient in a wing sauce. Vinegar works great to balance rich meats like pork butt so it seems natural that it would work well with wings--the most fat-rich part of chicken.
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My wing sauce recipe includes vinegar:
Ok, swore I would never share my "secret" buffalo wing sauce recipe, but here goes. I found this recipe on Usenet in 1994, and printed it off, and its
I know the recipe recommends margarine. I use butter and just heat until the butter melts, no hotter. I usually toss all the ingredients in a pyrex measuring cup in the microwave and hit it 30 seconds at a time, then stir, and repeat a couple times until it is melted.
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Willy I think it is because butter does separate if you let it reach a boil. I've found the magic number is to get up to about 115F, and the butter will melt completely while stirring, and it remains emulsified and suspended.
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Club Member
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Jim Morris
Cookers- Slow 'N Sear Deluxe Kamado (2021)
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- Whatever I brewed and have on tap! See it here: https://taplist.io/taplist-57685
- If not cooking outdoors, I am cooking on the stovetop with my 14" carbon steel wok, 12" CI skillet, or in the oven with my two Lodge CI pizza pans, or two dutch ovens. I've also got a nifty Lodge carbon steel grill pan that rocks for veggies outdoors.
I will point out that most hot sauces you would pick up to make your own wing sauce - Frank's, Texas Pete, Crystal, Louisiana red dot brand, and so on - have vinegar as the first ingredient. Adding another tablespoon straight vinegar per half stick of butter just gives it a little more kick.
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