Homemade BBQ Sauce

Updated Feb. 9, 2024

Homemade BBQ Sauce
Christopher Testani for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.
Total Time
10 minutes
Cook Time
5 minutes
Rating
5(3,463)
Notes
Read community notes

Smoked paprika is the secret weapon in this simple barbecue sauce, which goes beautifully with pork and chicken. If you’re painting the sauce onto cooking meat, thin it out with water to about a one-to-one ratio, which will keep the sugars from burning too quickly over the fire. Serve the full-strength stuff alongside the finished meat.

Featured in: Mixed Grill, the American Way

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Ingredients

Yield:About 1½ cups
  • cup ketchup
  • ½cup cider vinegar
  • ¼cup brown sugar
  • 2teaspoons pimentón (smoked Spanish paprika)
  • 1teaspoon ground cumin
  • 1teaspoon kosher salt
  • 1teaspoon freshly cracked black pepper
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (3 servings)

117 calories; 0 grams fat; 0 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 0 grams monounsaturated fat; 0 grams polyunsaturated fat; 29 grams carbohydrates; 1 gram dietary fiber; 23 grams sugars; 1 gram protein; 492 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Combine all ingredients in a small saucepan, bring to a simmer over medium heat and cook for 5 minutes.

Ratings

5 out of 5
3,463 user ratings
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Cooking Notes

I would not change a thing. Except split the ½ cup cider to be ¼ cup cider + ¼ cup bourbon. Very good as a general cooking sauce. It is also a great way to take leftover grilled flank steak (or any cut of steak or pork), place it in the bottom of a slow cooker, pour this sauce over, and heat on high for two hours, or low for three or more. It becomes a very easy pulled steak or pork bbq sandwich.

So - I guess I did change a thing...

Sauce was good, particularly if, as suggested, you add some spicy paprika or cayenne. I wasn't so fond of it diluted and used as a mop, however. Thinning by 1:1 made it too dilute and flavorless. One part water to two parts sauce might be a better ratio.

As almost everyone who has commented here has said, make your BBQ sauce YOUR BBQ sauce! I have never made the stuff the same way twice and never will. Experiment! One of the most admired sauces I have ever made consisted of blackberry puree and jam instead of ketchup. Rummage people!

I always salt and pepper my wings and cook without the sauce over high heat until the skin is crispy, then I lower the heat or move to indirect heat and brush with undiluted BBQ sauce, cook uncovered and turn and baste a couple of times until the sauce sets. Don't walk away and make sure to watch once the sauce is on so they do not burn. Always come out great.

This sauce was easy to make, but was too vinegar-y for my taste. I think I would cut vinegar down to 1/3 cup and reduce the cumin to 1/2 tsp. I did add an 1/8 tsp of Cayenne, and we liked the added heat!

I start here as well, but I also add a healthy dose of molasses, some yellow mustard, a variety of other spices in moderation (anise/fennel seed, cloves for example) and a fair amount of ground chili peppers (usually from my garden, like Ancho, Anaheim, Serrano, etc.). I go very easy with the cumin, as it can easily overpower the sauce. The molasses adds a lot of depth to the sauce, and gives it a beautiful dark color. Finally, I add a pinch of ground Habanero powder.

The vinegar thing is a regional preference. Some places love it, others not so much. My version is 1/4 cup soy sauce and 1/4 cup rice vinegar (or cider) in place of the 1/2 cup vinegar. Place all of the ingredients in a blender with a small red onion and a couple of garlic cloves. Blitz. Now we are talking BBQ! Oh, and personally I would add either chilli powder or a big pinch of oregano, which is the secret ingredient in Chilli Powder....

Excellent. While not a fan of jarred barbecue sauces, this home-made version was perfect. If you don't like sweet, use a scant 1/4 cup light brown sugar as I did. The smoked paprika makes it. I diluted a little for basting, not much.

OMG this was good! I easily could have doubled this recipe to accommodate our pulled pork - but maybe that's because I kept eating spoonfuls of it as if it were a soup! As other reviewers noted, I used about half the sugar, added a half teaspoon of cayenne pepper for some zing, and then I also added 1/2 - 1 tsp of Worcestershire sauce.

Wasn't sure about this sauce until I added a touch of garlic; thought that added a nice counterpoint and it got good reviews!

Even simpler and less sweet, and Texas certified: 1/2 cup Heinz chili sauce or ketchup, 1/2 cup Worcester sauce, 2 tbsp fresh ground black pepper, 1 tsp Tabasco sauce

Since this is a vinegar sauce I like it for pulled pork in the North Carolina sauce tradition.

I used molasses instead of brown sugar and it tastes amazing!

I added cayenne for heat and a little instant coffee to cut the sweetness. I also thought that diluting it made it too thin. Has anyone tried grilling chicken with full-strength bbq sauce?

Personally, I didn’t care for the cumin and I would omit it in the future. I eyeballed the measurements but reduced the vinegar by half and added a splash of Worcester sauce. I prefer the barbecue sauce provided by Melissa Clark’s pulled pork recipe

I made it ahead, but then forgot to cook it on the stove! I had to use rice vinegar for lack of apple cider vinegar. We suesvida’d our rack of spareribs for 8 hours, then brushed on the sauce and bbq’d them. It was amazing😋

I chose this recipe for the high reviews and minimal ingredient list, though it’s perfect for customizing to taste. A good base. I did half brown sugar, half molasses for a darker, richer sauce. I put in only a tsp of smoked paprika as I don’t like that flavor in large doses. I added plenty of cayenne for some bite, ground mustard, a little onion powder, and some garlic powder. I love vinegar but didn’t want it to overpower the meat, so I added a scant half cup. My new go-to!

A very good traditional, basic bbq sauce. Based on other notes, I cut vinegar in half and added bourbon, and reduced added sweetener (molasses) a tad.

We use tomatoes sauce instead of ketchup, molasses instead of brown sugar, chili powder not cumin. Also a cup of dived onions. Simmer in a sauce pan undiluted the onions are translucent Sauce goes on in the last 15-20 minutes

Cutting back on the vinegar and adding bourbon elevated this stuff bigly. Paired with low and slow spare ribs. Big hit.

We made this for our BBQ ribs. Added a teaspoon of crushed red pepper flakes. The sauce came out very tasty with a nice zing from the pepper flakes. We will be making this again. May never buy BBQ sauce again. This was so easy to make!!

A great basic sauce. The second and subsequent times I made this I cut back on the cumin as I found it made it taste a bit too tex-mexy for me, but go for it if you love cumin! I used 1 tsp each of sweet and hot paprika as I don't have any smoked paprika, then added some liquid smoke seasoning. Someone suggesting adding some bourbon - I will definitely try that!

This was really good. I made it with no changes. A word of warning: while cooking, it smells like feet.

Loved it. First, I followed the recipe, except I followed the suggestion to substitute the 1/2 cup of apple cider vinegar to equal parts of soy sauce and vinegar, as we are not fond of vinegary BBQ sauces. It tasted great but I decided to add molasses and prepared mustard. Everyone raved. The sauce was used to caramelize baby back ribs in the oven and with a smoked pork butt. Very impressive.

A great "base sauce." I added a few glugs of whooshtuhsher, a hefty pinch of gochugaru, and a long drizzle of molasses. Simmered for closer to 10. Nice!

Cut vinegar in half at least, add smoked paprika and sub a touch of molasses for some of the brown sugar

I subbed acv for aged sherry vinegar, added garlic powder, cayenne, mustard powder and mikes hot honey. Perfect! Chef’s kiss!

We liked this a lot. Only addition was some sriracha.

I have made this many times as is. This last time I used some of my overly ripe figs instead of brown sugar. I also cherry-picked from the comments and added a spoonful of molasses. Pretty good as is and a really good base

This was very good. The cumin was a bit overpowering - I'll reduce it the next time. I didn't get close to 1 1/2 cups of sauce, so I will double next time.

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