Back in March 2010, Eric decided to clean up his diet. We were on vacation in Florida when he realized that most of his favourite foods and drinks (such as Coke, Kellogg’s Raisin Bran, Ketchup, multigrain bread, etc) contained high fructose corn syrup. We found this odd because the labels in Canada do not list this ingredient on the very same products. After reading up on it, we realized that high fructose corn syrup is often called ‘glucose-fructose’ on Canadian labels. We were shocked.
When we got home from our vacation, we discovered that many of the same cereals, sauces, and dressings in our kitchen contained ‘glucose-fructose’ so we did a pantry overhaul. Since that vacation, not one pop has crossed Eric’s lips and he also gave up his go-to products that contain glucose-fructose. This meant switching to Nature’s Path cereal, organic ketchup, Silverhills Bread, and 100% natural fruit juices, to name a few.
One of the glucose-fructose containing condiments is our beloved BBQ sauce! We use BBQ sauce a lot in the summer to give a little kick to whatever we’re grilling. We recently purchased an ‘all-natural’ BBQ sauce from Whole Foods only to find out that it contained corn syrup and a few other questionable ingredients. That’s when I decided to take matters into my own hands and try to make some myself.
Before the BBQ on Saturday, I made my first batch of homemade BBQ sauce adapting a recipe from Veganomicon that I saw on Matt’s blog. Any you know what? It really wasn’t as hard as I thought it would be. The sauce was thrown together in no time. I’ll be making a couple modifications to this recipe next time I make it (I’ll talk about them below), but I think it was a good starting point!
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Homemade BBQ Sauce
Adapted from Veganomicon (recipe found here).
Yield: 2 & 1/4 cups sauce
Ingredients:
- 1 tsp extra virgin olive oil
- 1 medium-sized sweet onion, chopped finely
- 3-4 garlic cloves, minced
- 1/2 tsp kosher salt
- 1/2 tsp red pepper flakes (less if you don’t like it spicy)
- 22-oz crushed tomatoes (or 28oz can if that’s what you have)
- 1/3 cup blackstrap molasses (see note)
- 1/3 cup white vinegar + 1 tbsp apple cidar vinegar (or just use more white vinegar)
- 2 tbsp sugar
- 1 tbsp yellow mustard (Dijon works too)
Directions:
1. In a large saucepan, sauté the onion in oil on medium heat for about 7 minutes. Add the garlic and sauté for another minute.
2. Add in the rest of the ingredients except for the mustard and cook for about 30 minutes uncovered over low heat. Stir occasionally and make sure not to burn it.
3. Add the mustard and taste for sweetness/sourness. Add more sugar, salt, vinegar, etc if you think it’s necessary to achieve your desired flavour. Cook for another few minutes.
4. Optional: You may puree the sauce in a blender, but it isn’t necessary. I left mine chunky as I didn’t want to dirty the blender! Makes 2 & 1/4 cups sauce.
Note: I found this sauce to have a fairly pronounced molasses flavour. Next time, I will probably reduce the molasses to 3-4 tbsp and slowly add it in to taste.
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The sauce was much easier to throw together than I thought it would be! You basically just chop the onion and garlic, sauté, and then stir everything in, simmer for 20-30 minutes, and adjust the sauce to taste.
The sauce smells wonderful when it’s cooking in the saucepan. The flavour is quite nice, however I found the molasses flavour to be more pronounced than I prefer, so next time I will reduce the molasses to 3-4 tbsp. Other than that I loved it. The original recipe also called for 2 tsp liquid smoke, which I didn’t have, so you can always add that in if you prefer!
I’m not sure how long it keeps for in the fridge, so I decided to freeze half the batch. Hopefully it freezes ok.
Yesterday, we used some of the leftover sauce and made up some yummy BBQ lentil sandwiches for lunch!
The sandwiches contained:
- Silverhills sprouted grain bread
- hummus
- lentils + bbq sauce, heated up
- grilled red onion and yellow peppers
- tomato slices
- spinach
- Cucumber
- S & P
They were glorious. And messy. ;)
In other news…it’s June 6th which means…
Happy Birthday to my Sister, Kristi!
I’m looking forward to the 3rd week in July when Kristi, Pete, and my nephews come to stay with us for a week! Kerrie and fam are also staying here for a weekend during Kristi’s stay…it’s going to be a good time! I better start planning some kid-friendly meals. ;) Any ideas?
Also, Happy Anniversary to my loving in-laws, Ken and Margaret! ![]()








My family absolutely demolishes SilverHills Bread. My mother refuses to purchase any other.
We, in fact, visit 3 grocery stores on grocery day, because often one grocery store is out of HER bread. I’m just amazed that we get it at all in the Yukon!
Oh my goodness! Those lentil sandwiches look phenomenal! :)
As for kid friendly dishes-maybe you could do something like a build your own pizza station?
I’ve tried this recipe and it is delicious! I would recommend making it with the liquid smoke next time – I think that would help with the overly pronounced molasses flavor and adds a depth of flavor that other ingredients can’t replicate. Thanks for sharing!
I have the same problem with BBQ sauce – hate HFC and all the other additives. Suppose I’ll have to whip up some of yours ASAP! Also, why are your pictures always spectacularly gorgeous?
I made your original chocolate torte last night, and ohmygoodness–LOVE. Thanks for all the delicious recipes, Ange!
I love pic 8765! It’s so great! The colors are so bright, the inside of that sammie looks like heaven, and I love making my own condiments, too, b/c I can control what goes into them. I cannot stand too much added sodium and many salad dressings and dips think that you need tons and tons to be flavorful which is why I prefer to make my own. And your BBQ sauce looks sooo good!
And as a photography aside, shooting things like lentils, casseroles, sandwiches, or any kind of “mushy food”..I find to be SUCH a challenge. Or brown food. :) You did a FABULOUS job on these pics b/c I know this is very challenging to shoot! Or at least for me it is :)
I’ve been meaning to make BBQ sauce for a few months, thanks for the kick in the pants! I made some awesome ketchup and am excited to try my hand at some other tomato-based sauces.
I totally need to bookmark this! Thank you so much for posting this. We’re planning on doing some slow-roasting for my dad on father’s day, and it would be awesome to make sauce from scratch for him!
I LOVE homemade BBQ sauce, but I’ve been looking for a good one that isn’t so sugar-intense! I can’t wait to try this!
MY SAVIORRRR. I have been dying for a “healthy” BBQ sauce because we just got a grill!! Thanks Angeee
Hey you may wanna check out weelicious.com for some awesome kid friendly recipes! I love this for my wee-ones!
Thank you!
it always surprises me the sugar and added ingredients in seemingly simple condiments, so making your own is a great idea. It looks delicious and reminds me of summer so much. My roommates and I just bought a charcoal grill and are taking on the task of lighting her up tonight for the first time! With no boys to help lol.
I just went and checked the BBQ sauce that we buy and love and it’s actually got a good ingredient list, plus it’s Canadian! I found it at Zehrs:
http://www.canadianfavourites.com/Amazing_Dad_s_Organic_BBQ_Sauce_500ml_p/amazing001.htm
I do like the sounds of making your own and am very intrigued to try mixing it with lentils. What a great idea!
Thanks!
I love the BBQ recipe. My boyfriend makes his own, but puts a bunch of ketchup in…sorf of defeats the purpose;)
i was a label reading natzi. nothing in MY house contained hfcs. then like you i discovered that here in canada they call it something else. i was so upset because i thought i was being so dilligent!!!! so i had to clean out the cupboards again. i can’t believe even my son’s favourite cereal shreddies had it in it! although homemade bbq sauce sounds super good and yummy (i will try your recipe) i did find a couple of brands that didn’t have hfcs (not sure they are vegan though).
The sandwiches looks delicious!! And thank you for this recipe… I’ve always loved BBQ sauce but also avoid HFCS. I gave up soda almost 3 years ago as well! Always striving to find healthier alternatives. xo
The homemade BBQ sauce sounds wonderful. Homemade sauces always have such great flavor!
I’m not sure if these brands are available in Canada, but I know that Bull’ s Eye, my childhood favorite BBQ sauce, is corn-syrup free and available in regular grocery stores. They switched the formula a few years ago and it now uses molasses and real sugar. I also recently tried Guy Fieri’s BBQ sauce and it is super tasty as well, though a little more expensive.
Bulls Eye is available in Canada…good to know it’s corn syrup free! (and I’m not just saying that because my husband has 3 bottles on the go in the fridge, lol)
YUM! Homemade bbq sauce is the way to go, and this recipe looks wonderful!
I miss a good BBQ. I like Annie’s sauce, but I need to make my own so it can be free of all allergens.
Just letting you know that Isa is pretty sensitive of people posting her adapted recipes, I’ll give Matt a heads-up too. I love you all and I want the vegan universe to get along, but take care when posted published author’s recipes! Some let it slide more than others.
Yup, Matt had the recipe approved by Isa.
Never mind I see he’s got permission. Phew!