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Dog Sauce Shrimp

JEK

Senior Insider
 

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somethings are better left untranslated, here is a local recipe for it:
Sauce “chien”*: 3 chives, 2 shallots, 1 onion, juice of 1 lemon or lime, 2 cloves of garlic, parsley, hot red pepper, vinegar, ½ cup oil, salt, pepper.
Finely chop the chives, onion, shallots, parsley, and a tiny piece of hot red pepper. Put all into a bowl, add the lemon or lime juice, vinegar, and oil. Mix, add a cup of boiling water and let steep.
*Sauce “chien” is a simple but spicy Creole sauce
 
Ellen! You have made us happy! We have tried to recreate this for years. Thank you. I think we missed the vinegar and lemon juice.
 
Wishing Well makes an incredible sauce just like that...a few times I stopped in just to buy the sauce for what I was cooking
 
Rosemary said:
Ellen! You have made us happy! We have tried to recreate this for years. Thank you. I think we missed the vinegar and lemon juice.

you might want to try a few times to get the right amount of spiciness for yourselves.. some people use more hot pepper than others, for example...
 
Ellen, thanks for the recipe. It looks old-school, especially with more than a bit of hot pepper, which is what I've been looking for.

In my eyes, a proper old-school Sauce Chien is so-named because it has the bite of a dog, not because it contains dog (which it never has).

In the old days, I could always find the bite. These days, many Sauces Chien (Sauce Chiens?) are toothless.

Again, Thanks for the recipe.
 
hope it has the bite you are looking for. I hear some people add a splash of tabasco, that would do it as well I bet...
 
elgreaux said:
some things are better left untranslated...

Especially when they're proper nouns. Ellen, the story I see floating around the internet is that the "Chien" originates from the brand name of a popular knife used in the sauce's native Guadeloupe. You gotta better explanation?
 
Sauce chien (literally, "dog sauce") is a sort of high-voltage vinaigrette served throughout the French West Indies. How did it get its odd name? One theory holds that the "dog" refers to the fierce bite of the chiles. Another refers to the fact that this is a humble sauce, made without the egg yolks, butter, or cream found in more "noble" French sauces. Whatever its origins, sauce chien is an indispensable accompaniment to grilled seafood, chicken, and vegetables throughout the French West Indies.
 
On fait frire les accras
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Les voilà accompagnés de sa sauce chien
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Et, voilà le chien qui l'apprécie, lui aussi !
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