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16 homemade condiment recipes to always have on standby

Slather, glob, dollop and glug your way to a quick meal upgrade.

Cornersmith mustard

Cornersmith mustard Source: Alan Benson

First, a reminder: the best condiments to have on hand are the ones you regularly use. There's no point adding to the graveyard at the back of the fridge (we're looking at you, expensive gourmet barbecue sauce that no one likes but we can't bring ourselves to throw out due to the aforementioned expense).
But then, there's something so alluring about trying all the condiments, don't you think? One can simply never have enough things to dip, spread, slather or drizzle. Condiments may be the sidekick to the star's main recipe, but we all know how regularly the sidekick steals the show.

So, make your favourites from this list and try out a few new treats. Just remember to store them front and centre in the fridge or pantry. Things have a way of getting lost when they're stored at the back...
Kimchi
The great thing about making your own kimchi is that you can adjust the spicy, sour, salty and pungent to suit. Source: Poh & Co. 2
By all means, start with kimchi. It's honestly good with everything - try it in your fried rice, your dips, your noodles, your soup, your drinks, your toasties, your life.
Chilli sauce
This versatile chilli sauce will keep in the fridge for months, ready to set fire to whatever you please. Source: Adam Liaw
While we're on the subject of hot and spicy condiments, make sure you're keeping a good chilli sauce on hand. This particular one is especially good with chicken.
Liaw Family's XO sauce. Destination Flavour China
XO sauce is a collection of the most prized ingredients from around China, and it was named after XO cognac – the height of sophistication in Hong Kong in the '80s. Source: Destination Flavour China
The pungent, umami XO sauce deserves to be in every kitchen. It's an expensive sauce to make ('XO' is actually Hong Kong slang for expensive luxury), but, trust us, it's worth both the expense and the effort.
Rose petal jam - Marmellata di rose
A breakfast smelling of roses is a glorious way to start the day. Source: Hardie Grant Books / Emiko Davies
Once you make your own jam, you'll never go back. Like, this rose petal jam is made entirely with sugar and rose petals... it doesn't get better than that. Be warned, there's not enough shelf space in the world for all the jams you'll want to make.
Tomato chilli jam
A savoury jam is so good on a cold meat board or slathered on a fresh piece of sourdough. Source: Feast magazine
Leave some room for savoury jams like this tomato chilli jam. A dollop of this would lift any veggie, meat or (especially) potato into the stratosphere.
Nick's tomato sauce
You won't find fresh tomatoes, apples and onions in that blood-red store-bought sauce. Source: Alan Benson
While we're on the subject of tomatoes, it might be time to consider making your own tomato sauce. One lick of this good stuff and you'll never buy a bottle again.
Kale stem pesto
Don't stop at basil, use all the odds and sods in your stores to make goodies like this kale stem pesto. Source: Will Taylor / Harvard Common Press
With a jar of this Italian favourite on hand, you've basically got dinner ready in the amount of time it takes to cook the pasta. You can also dip your bread in your pesto, dollop it onto baked vegetables, use it instead of butter on your bread or add it to your steak.
Cornersmith mustard
The beauty of homemade mustard is experimenting with different flavours, so make smaller batches of lots! Source: Alan Benson
Tweak your homemade mustard depending on the time of year you're making it. Cornersmith's Alex Elliott-Howery suggests using sage in autumn, horseradish or rosemary in winter, and thyme in spring.
Mayonnaise
Make a plain mayonnaise in moments, then add a spin with siracha, pepperberries, brown butter or garlic. Source: Getty Images / Manuela Bonci / EyeEm
It's essential to keep mayo on hand and remarkably easy to whip your own up from scratch. Make just what you need, or a little extra to keep at eye-level in the fridge.
Lemon myrtle dukkah
Lemon myrtle adds a punchy, citrusy hit to an Egyptian classic. Source: Farah Celjo
This particular dukkah is a little left of field - make that an Aussie field as it has a lemon myrtle hit. it's really that easy to put your own spin on your dukkah mix.
Serrano salsa cruda
Pile some freshness into your dishes. Source: Pati's Mexican Table
No Mexican meal is complete without a side of salsa. It might be a salsa verde like this one, a tomato salsa or even a mix of both.
Carrot top chimichurri
Don't discard those carrot tops, there's a chimichurri calling. Source: Farah Celjo
The king/queen of Argentinian and Uruguayan salsas, chimichurri is the herby, vinegary, garlicky sauce made with whatever herbs and greens you have on hand. Trust us, you want this one in your stores.
Gochuchang-recipe
Gochujang is a fermented mix of chilli, glutinous rice flour, soy bean flour, malt flour and seasoning that adds a pungent and savoury flavour. Source: Brett Stevens
The Korean power pepper paste is essential to bibimbap and KFC, but also good as a dipping sauce for skewers, smeared over burger buns or dolloped onto ribs.
Tahini sauce
Tahini sauce is called tarator in Arabic and it's made with just tahini (toasted ground hulled sesame seeds), lemon and water. Source: Camellia Aebischer
One of the most useful condiments you'll keep on hand, tahini sauce is made from just three ingredients. Make it thick for dipping or thinner for drizzling. Either way, you'll be using plenty of this Middle Eastern staple.
Ajvar, a Bosnian capsicum relish is served in a small bowl
For all those times you don't have pasta sauce and want to swirl something through, ajvar is the answer. Source: Tammi Kwok
Relishes of all kinds should grace your stores, starting with the Bosnian favourite ajvar. It's made with capsicum and eggplant and it's eaten with every meal, any time of day (well, at least according to Farah Celjo's household it is).
Mango chutney
Chutney is one of those ingredients that just makes everything taste better. Source: Stockfood
Chunkier than a relish but no less exciting, a good chutney is loved from India (see mango chutney above) to Britain (see here) to the Aussie backyard choko bush.
It's a classic for a reason and we're bottling up this breezy beauty for all to devour.
Easy mint sauce
Fresh and vibrant Source: Rhys McGowan

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16 homemade condiment recipes to always have on standby | SBS Food