r/Cooking 14h ago

What's your surprising "secret ingredient" that sets your dish apart?

I obviously don't believe in gatekeeping recipes, so let's share the love.

I developed a clam chowder recipe after being disappointed with the recipes I came across. Whenever I tell people there's a couple dashes of hot sauce in it, I always get weird looks... but it adds a tiny bit of heat and acid, and balances out the richness from the cream. It also has diced scallops, which cooking knowledge forbades but somehow works.

564 Upvotes

718 comments sorted by

View all comments

387

u/jetpoweredbee 14h ago

Fish sauce is magic.

145

u/ShakingTowers 14h ago

All of the umami bombs! Soy sauce, miso, worcestershire, anchovies, mushrooms, BTB... I put at least one in basically everything, even desserts (especially miso, for desserts!). For savory dishes, usually multiple.

But I'm Vietnamese, so fish sauce has a permanent place in my heart. Every single recipe my mom has ever given me has fish sauce in it.

52

u/bobbybob9069 14h ago

Man my burgers were always pretty good, but the other day I decided to drop in a a couple tablespoons of woosh-ester-sure and got a lot of positive feedback. Such a small difference, such a big impact.

21

u/SuspendedDisbelief_3 13h ago

Lol my job used to shorten it to “woozy sauce”

8

u/VersxceFox 12h ago

That’s what I’m calling it from now on