The Chemistry of Xanthan Gum: Stop Your Sauce from Separating
Water and oil hate each other. If your hot sauce splits in the fridge overnight, you have an emulsion problem. Here is how commercial producers fix it without altering the flavor.
The Role of a Hydrocolloid
Xanthan gum is a hydrocolloid. It doesn’t cook your sauce; it simply binds water molecules together, dramatically increasing the viscosity of the liquid phase. This prevents heavier particles (like pepper mash or oils) from sinking or separating to the top.
The Danger of Overdosing
The difference between a perfectly stable sauce and “spicy jello” is literally fractions of a gram. A standard dose for hot sauce is between 0.1% and 0.3% of the total batch weight. If you try to measure this with a teaspoon, you will ruin the batch.
Weighing Your Stabilizers
To safely dose xanthan gum, you must weigh it. A standard kitchen scale isn’t accurate enough for 0.1 gram increments. You need a jeweler’s scale or a professional lab scale to ensure perfect stability.