African Pepper Sauce

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Here is how I make my well-loved African Pepper Sauce. This piquant highly aromatic sauce serves as a savory dip for Garlic Butter Wings, Fish Rolls, Puff Puff, and more!

Every home cook or chef needs to have this West African pepper sauce recipe in their back pocket!

African Pepper Sauce in white small serving dish.

This spicy sauce is one to always have on your table to serve as a condiment for meals or as a dip for appetizers. No storebought sauce compares!

I have made this African Pepper Sauce countless times for African and non-African parties. People, always love it whether they are African or not!

It is one sauce I learned how to make several years ago when I first learned how to cook. People always preferred my version over the version of others (humble brag 😊).

In this post, I am unleashing all my secrets for the best African Pepper Sauce!

Why You’ll Love This Recipe

  • An all-around condiment: I love having pepper sauce at home because it makes a whole lot of meals and snacks more palatable. This sauce makes complete meals come alive!
  • Spicy but tolerable: I add tomatoes to my pepper sauce to intensify the vibrant red color and water down the heat from the pepper. That way I can spoon a huge quantity on a hard-boiled egg and enjoy the wonders of the sweetness of the tomatoes combined with the spiciness of the peppers. Pure bliss!
  • Easy ingredients: This recipe contains familiar ingredients making it approachable for most people around the world.
Tomatoes, habanero peppers, onions, and herbs on a cutting board.

You need to have a jar, or bowl of this epic in your kitchen anytime. Some of my friends often take a jar of pepper sauce with them from my home when they come to visit. It makes a great edible gift.

Ingredients For African Pepper Sauce

Here are the ingredients you need for this tasty sauce:

Ingredients for African pepper sauce.
  • Hot peppers: Use habanero or scotch bonnet peppers.
  • Onion: Adds volume and flavor to the sauce.
  • Garlic and ginger: These 2 spices add so much flavor to the pepper sauce.
  • Tomatoes: The tomatoes help mellow the taste of the hot peppers making the sauce truly enjoyable. With tomatoes, the sauce is spicy but not overwhelming. If you want the sauce extra spicy omit or reduce the tomatoes.
  • Seasoning cubes or bouillon powder: Add some chicken bouillon powder, beef bouillon powder, or seasoning cubes for authentic West African flavor. My preferred brand for bouillon powder is Knorr and I used the Knorr Beef Bouillon Powder in this recipe.
  • Salt: To bring out all those wonderful flavors.
  • Ground white or black pepper: Either would work but I always prefer white pepper for its more exotic flavor.
  • Herbs: Parsley, celery, and basil are a trio of herbs often used in Cameroonian cuisine. I often use a combination of 2 herbs for this pepper sauce. Either basil and celery or basil and parsley. Here I used basil and parsley.
  • Oil: Adding a neutral-tasting oil serves as a preservative and also adds flavor. Vegetable oil, olive oil, avocado oil, canola oil, or any other oil would work.

For the full list of ingredients with measurements, check out the recipe card below.

Pepper sauce ingredients blended in a blender.

How To Make African Pepper Sauce

Here is how to make African Pepper Sauce in 4 easy steps:

  1. Prep the ingredients: Rinse all herbs and spices then remove the leaves from the hard stem of the herbs. Cut the tomatoes in quarters and cut the onion into chunks. Remove the stems from the peppers.
  2. Blend the ingredients: Add ingredients to the blender in the following order: First, add the tomatoes, then add the onions, then add the herbs, garlic, and ginger. Blend on low speed into a slightly chunky paste. There’s no need to add water before blending. Only add water if you want a lighter consistency. You can also process all the ingredients in a food processor.
  3. Cook down the ingredients: Add the blended ingredients to a medium-sized pot on medium heat and add the oil, bouillon powder, salt, and pepper. Bring to a simmer and let it simmer covered and without stirring for 15 minutes. Reduce the heat to low and let it simmer for about 15 minutes stirring from time to time.
  4. Cool and store: Let it cool then store it in an airtight container in the refrigerator. A mason jar with a tight-fitting lid is great for storing African Pepper Sauce!
Spicy sauce in a white deep bowl.

What To Use African Pepper Sauce On

You can pair African Pepper Sauce with the following:

Expert Tips

  • Storage: Store this pepper sauce in an airtight container in the refrigerator. This could keep for up to a month when properly stored with extra oil added to completely cover the surface. This sauce freezes well for up to 3 months.
  • Scaling the recipe: Double or triple the recipe depending on the quantity you want. Or reduce every ingredient by half to make a smaller batch.
  • When the sauce starts to simmer, your house may smell peppery and cause you to sneeze. Do well to cover your pot to reduce the smell and only open it to stir. Reduce the heat before stirring so the mixture doesn’t splatter on you. Thereafter, return your heat to normal.
  • You could also use this sauce as a spicy marinade for meat, fish, or chicken. Delicious!
  • Alternatively, you could the pepper sauce by first heating up the oil and pouring in the blended ingredients to fry for a few minutes. Frying the ingredients in oil deepens their flavor.
  • Handling hot peppers: When handling hot peppers, be sure to wash your hands often as they are quite spicy. Wearing a kitchen glove before and handling hot peppers will prevent the burn from the pepper.

Recipe FAQs

What is the name of African hot sauce?

There are various kinds of hot sauce enjoyed in countries across the African continent. One common African hot sauce is called ‘pili pili’ or ‘peri peri’ which means ‘pepper pepper’ in Swahili or Lingala languages. Pili Pili is enjoyed in Mozambique, Angola, and the Democratic Republique of Congo.

What is the hot sauce made in Africa?

Across West and Central Africa, a sauce, better known as “pepper sauce” is typically made with scotch bonnet or habanero peppers and other spices like garlic and ginger. There isn’t just one hot sauce for the African continent as various African countries make their own variation of hot sauce.

Is African pepper spicy?

There is not one kind of pepper that can be referred to as “African pepper”. Different kinds of peppers grow in Africa ranging from sweet to spicy varieties.

Similar Recipes

Love this African Pepper Sauce? Check out these African recipes as well:

If you make this recipe please leave a star rating below. Your rating helps others find the recipe plus I love hearing from you! Thank you!

African Pepper Sauce in white small serving dish.

African Pepper Sauce

5 from 2 votes
This African Pepper Sauce is a hot sauce made with hot peppers, spices, and herbs. The perfect accompaniment to any meal!
Prep: 15 minutes
Cook: 30 minutes
Total: 45 minutes
Servings: 20 servings

Ingredients  

  • 6 roma tomatoes cut into quarters
  • 1 red onion cut into chunks
  • 4 habanero peppers stems removed
  • 6 sprigs parsley rinsed, hard stems removed
  • 6 sprigs basil rinsed, leaves plucked from hard stems
  • 2 inches ginger root peeled and cut into chunks
  • 8 cloves garlic peeled
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground white pepper
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 2/3 cup neutral oil olive oil, avocado oil, or vegetable oil would work
  • 4 teaspoons beef bouillon powder Replace with 4 4g cubes of Maggi

Instructions 

  • Blend the ingredients: To a blender first, add the tomatoes, then add the onions, then add the herbs, garlic, and ginger. Blend on low into a slightly chunky paste. There's no need to add water before blending. For a lighter sauce, add the desired amount of water.
  • Cook down the ingredients: Add the blended ingredients to a medium-sized pot, on medium heat. Add the oil, bouillon powder, salt, and pepper. Bring to a simmer and let it simmer covered and without stirring for 15 minutes. Reduce the heat to low and let it simmer for about 15 minutes stirring from time to time to prevent burning.
  • Cool and store: Let it cool then store it in an airtight container in the refrigerator. A mason jar with a tight-fitting lid is great for storing African Pepper Sauce!

Notes

Storage: Store this pepper sauce in an airtight container in the refrigerator. This could keep for up to a month when properly stored with extra oil added to completely cover the surface. This sauce freezes well for up to 3 months.
Scaling the recipe: Double or triple the recipe depending on the quantity you want. Or reduce every ingredient by half to make a smaller batch.
Handling hot peppers: When handling hot peppers, be sure to wash your hands often as they are quite spicy. Wearing a kitchen glove before and handling hot peppers will prevent the burn from the pepper.

Nutrition

Calories: 77kcal | Carbohydrates: 2g | Protein: 0.4g | Fat: 8g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 2g | Monounsaturated Fat: 5g | Trans Fat: 0.03g | Cholesterol: 0.1mg | Sodium: 138mg | Potassium: 70mg | Fiber: 0.4g | Sugar: 1g | Vitamin A: 206IU | Vitamin C: 7mg | Calcium: 7mg | Iron: 0.1mg

Additional Info

Course: Appetizer
Cuisine: African
Calories: 77
Tried this recipe?Mention @preciouscore or tag #PreciousCore!

About Precious

Welcome to my core! I am Precious Nkeih, the recipe developer and writer right here on my blog, Precious Core. My goal is to show you insanely delicious recipes you can replicate in your kitchen. And I love to tell stories too. Hope you find recipes here that will make cooking easier for you! Check me out on YouTube at YouTube.com/PreciousKitchen.


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24 Comments

  1. Hello Precious. This has really been helpful to me. However here comes my question, if one doesn’t have a refrigerator, how else can he or she preserve the pepper sauce ?

    1. Hi Agatha, you could add enough oil to cover the pepper sauce and store in an airtight jar in a cool dry place. Hope this helps.

  2. My own recipe of pepper sauce are
    Onions
    White and black pepper
    Garlic and Ginger
    Country onion and Bebe
    Salt , Maggi and oil
    And there is also one spices call 3 cรดtรฉ ( Which has 3 size I think) I usually add a bit of this too.
    And they taste amazing.
    Thanks

  3. Dear Precious ,
    All your recipes are on point . I can never go wrong. Everything I tried so far my husband loves it and you know it’s not easy to satisfy a african man ๐Ÿ˜Š especially as a white woman trying to cook african food., but so far so good . Thank you xx

  4. Dear Precious,

    A few weeks ago, on the birthday of one of my Cameroonian friends we ate traditional fish with this amazing sauce. Iโ€™m Mexican and I love my food really spicy, so since that day I couldnโ€™t stop thinking about the sauce. Fortunately I found your blog and the delicious recipe. My stomach is happy! Thank you so much for sharing your secret. God bless.

  5. I am trying this recipe tonight, and am super excited about it. Seems easy, but i just pray it comes out correctly. Thank you

  6. Hey Precious, I lived in Yaoundรฉ for a year and ate piment there almost every day… The taste of pepper sauce brings back so many memories. It’s been two years since I came back from Cameroon and the first time I finally made the sauce at home, it tastes exactly like I remembered, so delicious! Thank you so much for sharing this recipe, I can’t wait to eat it with fried plantains ๐Ÿ™‚

    1. Awww so glad to bring back memories for you, Maria. And thanks for sharing with me. It really made my day.

  7. Hello ma’am
    My name is Bryan
    I have found your recipes so helpful,
    honestly.I also want to ask you a question,
    How do you know the right quantity to use when baking
    For me I want to bake cakes meat pie and chin chin for 50 people each I’m a little bit confused cas I don’t want to mess it up.
    Thank you very much ma’am
    Expecting your reply
    Will

    1. Hi Bryan, my recipes always tell the number of people the recipe can feed. That way, you can multiply the recipe to suit the quantity you need. Hope this helps.

  8. Hi Mam, very nice to see your blog.
    I am an Indonesian and trying to make Cameroonian dishes for my Cameroonโ€™s boyfriend and it turns out well. Both of my country (Indonesia) and Cameroon have a similiarity regarding to the taste of food but different kind of flavor.
    I would love to send my regards and thank you cause your recipe is a life saver last time I try to make a birthday party for him. He loves it. I am trying to make others recipes from your blog and I found your blog interesting.
    Thank you really much!
    Keep up with the good works.

    Cheers,
    Lyna

    1. Hi Lyna, reading from you makes me so happy! So glad to hear of how much the recipes have helped you. Thank you for taking the time to let me know. All the best!