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Acetaia Guerzoni EMILIA ROMAGNA

Green Jalapeño Sauce

Green Jalapeño Sauce

Regular price $16.00
Regular price Sale price $16.00
Sale Ships July 2026
Taxes included. Shipping calculated at checkout.
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Green jalapeño, fresh and grassy.

Green jalapeños, picked before they ripen red, give a different kind of hot sauce: fresher, grassier, more vegetal. Made organically in Modena with Guerzoni's biodynamic grape vinegar.

Green and luminous, with the unmistakable fresh-pepper aroma of just-picked jalapeño. Herbaceous, slightly tart, with medium heat that lifts rather than overwhelms. A zesty, almost salsa-verde character.

Real grape vinegar. Same Demeter biodynamic vinegar that Guerzoni uses for balsamic, paired with peppers caught at peak crunch.

Generations of fermentation craft. No thickeners, no extracts, no industrial shortcuts. Just real fruit and real vinegar.

Why you'll love it

  • Made with organic green jalapeños from Modena
  • Real grape vinegar from Guerzoni's biodynamic estate
  • Fresh, grassy and vegetal, not just hot
  • No thickeners, no extracts, no shortcuts
  • The verde to your roja, every kitchen needs both

How to enjoy it

  • Drizzle on tacos al pastor, fish tacos and ceviche
  • Stir into guacamole or yogurt for a fresh herby kick
  • Whisk into vinaigrettes with lime and cilantro
  • Brighten avocado toast, eggs and grilled vegetables

Specifications

  • Producer: Acetaia Guerzoni
  • Origin: Modena, Emilia-Romagna, Italy
  • Ingredients: Organic green jalapeño peppers, organic biodynamic grape vinegar, salt.
  • Allergens: Contains sulphites (naturally occurring).
  • Heat level: Medium
  • Net contents: 100 ml (3.4 fl oz)
  • Certification: Organic, Demeter Biodynamic
  • Storage: Cool, dry place. Refrigerate after opening.

🌱 Organic | 🥬 Vegan | 🌶️ Real chili sauce | 🌱 Biodynamic | 🇮🇹 Made in Modena

Educational information only. Not intended as medical advice.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Are these ready to use, or do I need to cook them first?
Ready to heat — not to cook from scratch. Warm the sauce in a pan, add freshly drained pasta with a cup of the cooking water saved, finish everything together for 60 seconds with a drizzle of extra virgin olive oil. The pasta finishes cooking in the sauce. The starchy water does the binding. No long simmering needed — that would just drive off the flavor that was already built correctly at the source.
What is Piennolo del Vesuvio — and why does it matter?
Piennolo del Vesuvio DOP is an heirloom cherry tomato grown on the volcanic slopes of Vesuvius. Thick skin, very low water content, exceptional sugar-acid balance, and minerals from volcanic soil that no other growing region can replicate. Traditionally harvested in August and stored in hanging clusters through winter, slowly drying and concentrating as they go. In a sauce, Piennolo is immediately recognizable — brighter, more structured, more complex. This is the kind of tomato that makes you understand why Italian cooks talk about tomato varieties the way wine people talk about terroir.
What actually separates a great Italian sauce from a mediocre one?
The ingredients list. A great sauce has three or four items: tomatoes, olive oil, salt, a herb. That’s it. Added sugar means the tomatoes weren’t good enough. Starch thickeners, citric acid, or stabilizers mean the same thing. Organic certification matters too — in a 2026 investigation of 16 Italian passate, Italy’s leading independent consumer testing magazine found that 8 of the 16 brands tested positive for spirotetramat, a pesticide banned by the EU in October 2025 for suspected reproductive toxicity, with some samples approaching the legal limit. Organic certification means an independently audited clean supply chain — no synthetic pesticides, no spirotetramat. When a sauce also names the tomato variety on the label, you’re looking at a producer confident enough in their raw material to stake their identity on it.
How long does an opened jar keep?
4–5 days, sealed, in the fridge. No preservatives means these behave like freshly cooked tomato sauce — not like something engineered for a six-month pantry life. Reheat gently in a pan. That’s it.