The one that started arguments at the Honey Festival.
Traditional Asian chili oil meets raw California wildflower honey. We steep real chili peppers and Asian aromatics in our honey for 45–60 days – no heat applied, no shortcuts, no flavor extracts. The result is a hot honey with layers: sweet first, then garlic and sesame undertones, then a slow heat that builds and stays.
How to Use It
- Dumplings and potstickers – Drizzle over steamed or pan-fried dumplings. Skip the soy sauce, use this instead.
- Ramen – A tablespoon stirred into your broth right before serving. The heat blooms in the steam.
- Fried chicken – Korean fried chicken with Asian hot honey is the dish that made people line up at our booth.
- Stir fry finish – Toss noodles or vegetables with a tablespoon in the last 30 seconds of cooking.
- Pizza – Pepperoni pizza with Asian hot honey. Trust us.
- Wings – Toss fresh-fried wings in a bowl with 3 tablespoons. Done. No other sauce needed.
- Spring rolls – Use as a dipping sauce straight or cut with rice vinegar.
What makes it different from our regular Hot Honey: The Asian Hot Honey brings garlic, sesame, and umami where the original brings pure chili heat. Different dishes, different moods, same 45–60 day patience.
Raw honey + real Asian chili peppers. Cold infusion. Not certified organic – because cities aren't organic. From the last farm in Campbell, CA.