Home β Categories β Spicy BBQ Sauces
These sauces pack serious spice! Start small and work your way up. Not recommended for kids or those sensitive to heat.
Understanding spice levels helps you choose the perfect heat for your palate
Gentle warmth, family-friendly
Noticeable spice, manageable for most
Serious heat, spice lovers only
Extreme heat, proceed with caution
Stubb's Spicy Bar-B-Q Sauce
Authentic Texas heat with complex flavor. Perfect balance of spice and taste that builds gradually.
Bone Suckin' Hot Sauce
Serious heat that doesn't sacrifice the tangy BBQ flavor. For experienced spice lovers only.
Famous Dave's Devil's Spit
Great heat level at an affordable price. Perfect for those wanting to try spicy BBQ sauce without breaking the bank.
Authentic Texas Heat with Complex Flavor
πΆοΈπΆοΈπΆοΈπΆοΈπΆοΈπΆοΈπΆοΈ
Serious heat that builds gradually - not for beginners!
β β β β β
9.0/10 - Outstanding for spice lovers
Stubb's brings authentic Texas barbecue tradition with this perfectly balanced spicy sauce. Unlike many hot BBQ sauces that sacrifice flavor for heat, Stubb's maintains complex taste while delivering serious spice that builds gradually.
The heat experience: Starts with robust tomato and molasses flavors, then the cayenne and jalapeΓ±o kick in around second 3-4. The burn builds steadily and leaves a pleasant lingering heat that enhances rather than overpowers your meat.
β Perfect heat progression - builds gradually
β Complex flavor beyond just spice
β Authentic Texas pitmaster heritage
β No artificial heat additives
β Great thickness for coating meat
β Too spicy for sensitive palates and kids
β Higher price than mild sauces
β Limited availability in some areas
β May overpower delicate fish/chicken
π° Usually $3-5 per bottle | β 4.6/5 stars with 15,000+ Amazon reviews
Heat Level: 6/10 (Medium-Hot)
Heat Level: 5/10 (Medium)
Heat Level: 4/10 (Mild-Medium)
Heat Level: 4/10 (Mild-Medium)
Heat Level: 3/10 (Mild)
Heat Level: 3/10 (Mild)
Start with milder options (4-5/10) and work your way up. Heat tolerance builds over time, so don't jump straight to the fire level!
Bold meats like beef brisket can handle more heat, while chicken and fish pair better with moderate spice levels (4-6/10).
If cooking for mixed audiences, keep mild options on hand or choose sauces where heat builds gradually rather than immediate fire.
High heat cooking can intensify spiciness. Apply spicy sauces during final minutes to prevent burning and overpowering heat.
Try small bottles first or look for variety packs. What's "medium" to one person might be "fire" to another!
Keep dairy (milk, yogurt), bread, or rice nearby when trying new spicy sauces. Water actually makes heat worse!
Affiliate Disclosure: This site contains affiliate links to Amazon and other retailers. We may earn a small commission when you purchase through our links at no additional cost to you. This helps support our testing and review process. All opinions and recommendations are our own based on thorough testing.
Get our free BBQ sauce guide plus weekly deals and new reviews.
Β© 2025 BarbequeSauce.com - Your Ultimate BBQ Sauce Resource
Bringing the heat since 2021! π₯
Privacy Policy β’ Affiliate Disclosure β’ Terms of Service β’ Contact Us