La costena - in Japan, it's about as close as I get to what I had in Texas for store brands. When possible, I just make my own.
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I'm starting to think that when an American says salsa it means one specific kind of sauce.
It's salsa roja, salsa verde, salsa fresca, and any other fruit (mango is common) based condiment that you'd eat with chips. Salsa de mole, we just call mole. Other types of Mexican sauce like what you'd put over enchiladas, just gets called "enchilada sauce".
It's a common thing with loan words to have them only applied to the subset of things that were originally imported and called by that name. No one out of Italy, for example would call pizza bianca "pizza" if you gave them a piece and asked what it is (I'm talking about roman pizza bianca, not "white pizza" being back translated).
Sometimes the opposite happens, like "curry" being derived from a specific thing in a specific part of India, being applied by the British (and everywhere else they exported it) to basically any saucy Indian food.
Yeah we’re basically referring to salsa roja lol it’s the most common
Been disappointed so many times by store-bought salsa. I don’t like salsas that are pureed smooth like a tomato sauce, and without hardly any spice. Then I found Roberto’s of Santa Cruz. Spicy, garlicky, fresh. This is my holy grail and what I buy from now on.
They’ve got it at Safeway and Whole Foods where I’m at, in the refrigerated section. Not sure if they carry it in your location. But it’s on Amazon, apparently.
My wife is from Mexico so nothing in stores will do. My recommendation would be “nothing American.” ¯_(ツ)_/¯
¯\(ツ)/¯
You need to double up the \
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
You need to tripple up the \
I think mine’s drowning, not shrugging.
Everyone is saying home made and they're right. But if you are too lazy, I've found that Mexican supermarkets will have fresh store made salsas that are good and decently spicy.
It's OK to add salsa picante (hot sauce) to salsa ranchera (cooked: canned or jarred salsa). That's what I do to just about any canned, including my own. Mine is always sweet because it's homegrown tomatoes that provide a lot of sugar and homegrown Anaheim and Hatch chile which never get super hot. Everyone can eat it out of the jar and I can just put picante in it to taste. But yeah, make a pico de gallo whenever you have the fresh veggies to mix it up. Cilantro is also called Coriander in the UK, perhaps Europe also.
None. I make my own pico de gallo instead. Shits easy as hell and is tasty as fuck.
Dice one medium white onion, 2 Roma tomatoes, a handful of cilantro, juice 1 lemon and 2 limes (personally, I prefer key limes), add salt and pepper.
Best shit.
Key lime juice also makes for a very interesting margarita.
What gives it the heat?
You can add jalapenos (or a hotter pepper) if you want. I like habanero, but I don't put it in the pico others will share.
The internet comments, apparently
If you're white, the pepper
No jalapeños??
Warning... These little peppers don't fuck around.
They put you in fight or flight mode
Harris teeter’s pineapple habanero salsa is the devil and the best fucking salsa on the planet. Don’t let it fool you. It’s so tasty, you scoop several bites, 60s later the heat sneak attacks you
Make your own.
Pace has a ghost pepper salsa that scratches the itch for me. It's as spicy as any commercial jarred salsa I've found.
I'm not buying American these days, but Newman's Own has a few great salsas.