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4 Spicy Condiments to Keep In Your Fridge Forever

These spicy chili pastes, oils, and sauces should be staples in your pantry for adding heat, texture, and umami to everything you cook.

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Chances are you've spent the last ten years fighting (or, honestly, just submitting to) anaddiction to Sriracha, the hot sauce made from a mix of chili peppers, vinegar, garlic, and sugar that's a popular addition to Thai andVietnamese cooking. Thatlittle red bottlewith the green cap and iconic rooster logo has made its way deep into American popular culture—showing up in restaurants, fast food chains, and even as a Lay'spotato chip flavor. But topping Brussels sprouts with the stuff or squirting it on aBánh mìsandwich is just the beginning.

If you want to take yourspicy gameto the next level, you need to startcookingwith hotness. Luckily, there's a whole legion of hot condiments from various parts of Asia that make adding a spicy, salty, tangy hit of umami to soups, marinades, and sauces incredibly easy. They won't be the type of ingredient that you use once, forget about, and have to toss months later—they practically last forever if you keep them in the fridge. Instead, these will become the newpantry staplesyou reach for over and over again.


Sambal Oelek

This Indonesian condiment is bright red and has a slightly thick consistency, putting it somewhere between a sauce and paste. It has a straightforward chili flavor because it's made with fresh chilis and doesn't feature any fermented products. The bottle recommends using it oneverything("to heat up your stir-fry dishes, pizza, eggs, pasta, or anything you desire") and we're totally on board. One more thing to add to the list? It also makes a killer glaze forshrimp lettuce wraps.


Gochujang

That funky tang you taste when sampling this Korean paste? That's thanks to gochujang's use of fermented soy beans. Because this stuff can be, well, a little intense, we recommend using it as the base for a super flavorful marinade along with garlic, ginger, sake, and mirin forbrisket, skirt steak, or sliced pieces of pork shoulder.


Black Bean Sauce

Also known asdoubanjiang, this Chinese ingredient is a fundamental flavor-building block of Sichuan cuisine. Fermented black beans get blended with soy bean oil, water, chili, and salt to to make a thick paste that's equal parts salty and spicy. If you're looking to makema-po tofu—the Sichuan dish that's guaranteed to leave you numb from the heat—you'll need to pick up a bottle of this stuff.


Chili Oil

The list of ways you can use this fiery Chinese oil—the thinnest of all the condiments listed here—is practically endless. A small spoonful instantly adds a spicy kick to soups and bowls of sesame noodles.