The Most Versatile Coney Sauce You'll Ever Make: The Red Lion Red Hot Coney Sauce

in #steemfoods3 years ago


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It's been a long time coming but I finally got the top secret recipe to the best most versatile coney sauce on the west side of the state, of course Flint coney sauce reigns the state over but I could only dream of getting my hands on that recipe. So who holds such a honor as to have the best coney sauce in our city? Sam Koukios who founded several Red Lion Restaurants throughout the area. After Sam's passing and many will tell you the mismanagement by his son's brought the demise of the restaurant in 2004. It seemed the secret sauce was to be lost forever, held upon by very few who ever got the complete list of ingredients as Sam always insisted no one single person could add all the ingredients when it was being made. I use to love to go there and get American fries with the sauce and cheese added on top and a sprinkle of onions. Most went there for the red hots, that's what they called the chili dogs but it became the social gathering spot for decades for people of all walks of life. That's why it was recently announced that they will resurrect the sign to the restaurant freshly off being renovated this month back into a spot close to where it use to stand. It may sound silly to some a sign without a restaurant but it's just one of those things in life where you say "you really had to be there" to understand it. If you couldn't find a member of your family chances were better than not they were down at the Red Lion enjoying coffee, red hots or any other number of entree's offered up by the eatery.

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I have tried over the years to replicate the recipe, bought all sorts of chili sauces and only one even came close to some resemblance of the beloved sauce. About a month or so ago someone mentioned it on a local neighborhood blog, low and behold two people posted recipes for the secret sauce, they varied slightly so it was one of those things where you tried them both to see which came closest. One came closer to tasting like the chili they served while the other resembled the coney sauce to perfection.

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You can put this on hot dogs, American Fries, make chili hamburgers out of it and you can even serve yourself up to the owner's son special spaghetti recipe he use to call sassy spaghetti. Which basically was the coney sauce mixed with beans (the sassy part) served on top of a bed of spaghetti, he made a killing selling his special spaghetti.

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While making the sauce I finally figured out that mysterious ingredient I'd often come across when eating foods such as beef burritos, you know that feeling you get there's something else besides beef in there but you just can't put your finger on it. That ingredient is cracker mill. You can buy your own cracker meal or you can make your own by putting crackers in a plastic bag then rolling over them until they are finely crushed. In the case of the red hots I think it was used to absorb liquid to make the sauce more firm but I can see where some would use it as a filler to cut cost, none would be the wiser, at least that wouldn't have been something I'd guessed but it has that same texture mix I'd often try and put my finger on. I worked at the Ye Old Red Lion which was right across the street from the Red Lion when I was young, shows you how popular the places were when you could not only support having several restaurants in the city but two right across from each other. Anyway one of his son's use to do just the opposite, I worked three jobs back then, one full time day job, part time job at a gas station and third shift down at the Ye Old, he'd water down the hot dog sauce and tell us people coming in drunk don't care even though we complained they'd often throw them at us they were so runny. Now you can understand part of why they went out of business. One night the pan to the sauce had dried up sauce on it so I emptied it into a clean pan and was carrying the pan into the kitchen. He stopped and asked where I was going with that and I said it has dried up sauce on the sides, he grabbed the pan and proceeded to tell me if I wanted thickness here's your thickness and he scraped the dried up sauce off and put it into the fresh pan. His dad let him go before he passed away but unfortunately his other son had a gambling problem. Now without further ado here's the famous recipe to the secret Red Lion Red Hot Sauce:

1 1/2 pounds hamburger
2 onions diced
1 tablespoon chili powder
1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
1 package chili mix
8 oz tomato sauce
1 cup beef broth
1 cup water
5 to 6 drops of Tabasco sauce
cracker mill (I used 10 quarter crackers crushed)
salt and pepper to taste
cinnamon to taste, one teaspoon or less according to your taste.
Cook the hamburger with the diced onions in it. Add garlic powder, chili powder and season with salt and pepper, drain. Add chili mix, tomato sauce, beef broth and water, let simmer adding cinnamon a little at a time, I used about 1 teaspoon, when liquid is mostly absorbed add the cracker mill and your Tabasco sauce. The cracker mill absorbs any left over liquid and makes a nice firm coney sauce.

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I will have to give this a try! I grew up in Cincinnati, and so my idea of "the best coney sauce" is going to be very different, but I can get into the best coney sauce that is NOT from Skyline Chili lol!

So you know what Skyline Chili is?....I see it here in cans for almost five bucks a can. I've never had much luck with canned chili so I haven't opted to want to pay five bucks and end up not liking it. The Flint Coney sauce is the bomb, when I use to go to Flint I'd have people asking me to bring it back by the pint for them. My best guess is it's made with some sort of corned beef mixed in it, it's just so fantastic.

I've made the Red Lion coney sauce like three times since I got the secret recipe, the American Fries which I throw onions in while frying, with the coney sauce and a heaping handful of cheese has always been one of my favorites. Living alone now though does pose a problem when deciding making meals and not having so much left you have to eat it for days, some foods will tend to freeze well others not so much so instead I'll opt to try and organize where if I make the coney sauce I'll do the American fries a couple days a week, then chili dogs rotating with another dish like spaghetti which is another one where you have this whole jar of sauce and use only half of it and need only a couple of slices of garlic bread, so since I was craving spaghetti for some strange reason I opted to alternate the coney stuff with spaghetti and did what I called trash can subs with the rest of the garlic bread. It all worked out, going to do a post about my trash can subs...lol.

yeah. Cincinnati had 3 Greek chili chains, Gold Star, Empress and Skyline. Cincinnati folks can get drunk and argue all night about which is best, but Skyline is my favorite. There is a pretty good copy cat recipe here, if you are curious, and if you ever see this reply lol!
And the lady is right, Montgomery Inn for ribs, LaRosa's for pizza and Graeter's ice cream are the other highlights of Cincy cuisine!
https://www.thechunkychef.com/copycat-skyline-cincinnati-chili/

Outside of using tomato sauce instead of paste, no cholcolate, red pepper flakes or apple cider vinegar that is exactly the ingredients I use to make my chili. That is so weirdly close. I'd paid five bucks for a can of this to end up telling myself this almost taste like mine. lol. I am definitely on this one though, who'd thought chocolate in chili. I was going to make the Red Lion chili soon and post up that recipe but I think I will do this one first because I can't wait to try it. I can always make the other one next month and make a post. Sometime this week I am going to do a Walking Dead bake. I was watching the news the other night and they were saying that canned goods are good for years as long as there is no dents in the cans, and jars are properly sealed and have no cracks. When cleaning out my stock from the pandemic to restock because most were getting near their best use by dates I found a couple cans of beans and one jar of spaghetti I must have missed that best use was in 2020. So I am conjuring up a walking dead recipe of something out of it...maybe that should be "fear" of the walking dead. Should be quite comical if I survive it. lol. If I don't you'll be the only one who knows what happened to me. lol.

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