BC: HOT HONEY
BC: HOT HONEY
When you crave the sweet but want just a bit (or a lot) of heat, Bite Clubs Hot Honey is perfect for drizzling, slathering, dunking, or cooking.
We start with organic raw honey and peppers and lock them tight in a vacuum chamber and draw the pressurization down to what is equivalent to the first layer of space! This opens up the peppers and pulls the honey through it. Then we crank up the heat and hold it at a very precise temperature to fuse the flavors together without altering the honeys natural structure. NOTE: The Jalapeno Hot Honey Flavor has been retired. We found that the wonderful healing properties of the honey actually reduces the capsaicin burn. In the case of Jalapenos…it basically eliminated it. What good is Hot Honey if it’s not…well…hot?
Garlic & Habanero - Fresh garlic takes a dunk with organic orange and red habaneros. Rock this in (or on) your cornbread. Or kick up your Honey Garlic Shrimp! And tell me this wasn’t meant for wings!!!
Red Thai Peppers - Fresh Red Thai peppers deliver on the burn and work well with the natural sweetness of the honey. Blend this into your sweet chili sauce to bring it to a new level or blend a bit into your Red Curry!
Szechuan - The lip numbing tingles in a sweet package! Roasted Szechuan peppercorns are rough ground and blended in to add depth and heat to almost any dish! Stirfrys, Fried Rice, chicken, shrimp, pork…there’s no end to the usage! **Note: From grinding, the Szechuan honey has remnants of the peppercorns in it, giving it a bit of a different texture. Although we try to filter out as much as possible, some of it is so fine it passes though. It is totally edible and actually benefits the honey a bit because it melds deeper the longer it’s together.
Chipotle - Rich smokey heat grabs your attention hard! Glaze a pork roast with this. Drizzle it on chicken for a new twist for your fajitas!
Ghost Pepper - Just because some want to watch the world burn…**Note: The natural awesomeness of honey actually reduces the burn of the ghost peppers a bit. So Instead of about 1 million Scoville units, this would probably come in closer to 750,000 after incorporation….