Description
Jack Miller's Bar-B-Que Sauce is a unique blend of seventeen individual products. The mixture is cooked slowly in our kettles until it becomes the rich, thick, tangy product that has made it so famous in South Louisiana for over four decades. It enhances the flavor of any kind of meat, whether barbecued on an open grill outdoors or cooked in the oven. It can be used in all kinds of recipes or as a condiment for burgers and other sandwiches.
Unit Size: 32oz
Ingredients: Water, Mustard (Vinegar, Water, Mustard Seed, Salt, Turmeric, Paprika, Spices), Catsup (Tomatoes, Corn Syrup, Vinegar, Salt, Onions, Garlic, Natural Flavors), Soybean Oil, Dehydrated Onions, Sugar, Chili Sauce (Tomatoes, Corn Syrup, Vinegar, Salt, Onions, Natural Flavors), Tomato Paste, Margarine (Soybean Oil, Partially Hydrogenated Soybean Oil, Water, Salt, Whey, Soybean Lecithin, Vegetable Mono and Diglycerides, Sodium Benzoate, Natural Colors, Artificial Flavor, Vit. A Palmitate), Hot Sauce (Peppers, Vinegar, Salt, Cellulose Gum, Artificial Colors Yellow 6 and Red 40), Worcestershire Sauce (Water, Vinegar, Sugar, Salt, Mustard, Soy Sauce, Allspice, Black Pepper, Celery Seed, Garlic, Onion, Curry, Caramel Color, Spices, Sodium Benzoate), Vinegar, Salt, Paprika, Spices, Dehydrated Garlic.
Ingredients:
- 1 cup Jack Miller’s Bar-B-Que Sauce
- 1/3 cup cooking oil, butter, or margarine
- 2 or 3 dashes of Louisiana hot sauce
- 2 or 3 dashes of Worcestershire sauce
Cooking Instructions:
Heat all ingredients in a saucepan at a low heat setting. After heating for a few minutes the added oil will absorb the flavor and seasonings in the barbecue sauce. As it cools the oil will rise to the top. This is what you want to use to baste the meat that’s cooking on your barbecue pit. As you baste with the oil it will keep the meat moist while cooking. The excess will pass through the meat and burn away. The flavor and seasoning will stay in the meat. When the meat is cooked you can place it in a container and baste well with the thick sauce that’s left in the sauce pot. If you put a tight lid on the container the sauce will absorb into the hot meat and give it an unforgettable flavor. You may substitute 7-Up, Sprite, ginger ale, or even orange juice in place of oil if you barbecue in your oven.
21 Reviews
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My uncle was Cajun and this is the sauce he used for BBQ
My uncle was Cajun and this is the sauce he used for BBQ. He taught my mother to put the sauce in a pot with a little cooking oil and let it simmer for a few minutes. Then put the chicken on the grill let it cook until the outer skin is brown then keep basting with the sauce. While the chicken is cooking the Aroma can be smelled all over the neighborhood and yes it tastes as good as it smells! It's the best!
How ‘bout addin’ a little lagniappe to your order?
Add Boudin
Add Sausage
Add Andouille
Add Tasso
Add Some Spice
Add Some Sauce