Dill Pickle Hot Sauce
Mild + Tangy Pair this with burgers, hotdogs, wings, perogies, borscht, sausage, and anything else you can think of. Feeling adventurous? Mix it into honey for a playful honey dill sauce that's sure to elevate any dish. The possibilities are endless—let your taste buds lead the way!
Heat Scale: 1/5
Ingredients: White vinegar, Dill pickles (Cucumbers, Water, White vinegar, Salt, Garlic, Calcium chloride, Polysorbate 80, Seasoning, Turmeric), Jalapeño pepper, Dill weed, Garlic, Salt, Sugar, Celery seed, Mustard powder, Black pepper, Xanthan gum.
ALLERGY ALERT
Contains Mustard.
About Pueblo Chili Co:
The concept for Pueblo Chili Co. was born in 2013 when the founder, Raquel Vigueras, was in graphic design school at VCAD in Vancouver.
It was in a second semester conceptualization class where Raquel was tasked with developing a solution to a design problem, and Raquel chose the hot sauce industry. It interested her a lot, and during her time in Vancouver, she always kept the idea of eventually starting a hot sauce business in her back pocket.
Upon completion of her graphic design diploma, Raquel moved to Regina, Saskatchewan. After thinking about pursuing her dream of starting a hot sauce business for a hot five years, she eventually took the leap in 2019.
Raquel's biggest supporter is her mother, who helps her in the commercial kitchen, testing recipes and bottling them with her. Raquel could not pursue her business without the tireless help of her mom.
But, why Pueblo?
Raquel's father immigrated to Canada from Chile as a refugee in the mid-1970s as a result of a coup d’état that occurred on September 11, 1973. There’s a song titled “El pueblo unido jamás será vencido” (“the people united will never be defeated”) that was part of the new Chilean song movement that’s near and dear to her heart. It was recorded in 1973 by Quilapayún and was the anthem of the popular unity government, and eventually became the anthem of the Chilean resistance to the Pinochet regime.
Pueblo Chili Co. hot sauce is dedicated to all the Chileans across the world who suffered as a result of the coup in 1973, and especially to Raquel's hero: her father.