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Prairie Fire Shot

One ounce of tequila with a dash of Tabasco. Two ingredients, one shot glass, no chaser. The kind of pour that ends the round, not opens it. Heat first, then the agave warmth, then the burn down the chest that gives the shot its name.

Prairie Fire shot of tequila with hot sauce in a shot glass
4.63 from 27 votes
Calories: 64kcal
Prep Time: 3 minutes
Total Time: 5 minutes
Get ready for the Prairie Fire Shot! This bold mix combines the robust flavor of tequila with the intense heat of Tabasco sauce, creating a powerful and unforgettable drink. Perfect for thrill-seekers and adventurous drinkers, this shot will add excitement to any gathering.

Ingredients

Instructions

  • Fill a shot glass with tequila.
  • Drop a dash of Tabasco sauce into the shot glass and around the edge.
  • Serve immediately and enjoy!

Notes

The Prairie Fire Shot is perfect for those who enjoy bold and spicy drinks. The combination of tequila and Tabasco sauce creates a powerful and intense flavor profile that is sure to leave an impression. This shot is ideal for parties and gatherings where you want to add a touch of excitement and adventure.
For the best experience, serve the Prairie Fire Shot well-chilled. Its quick preparation and striking flavors make it an excellent option for spontaneous fun or planned events. The daring blend of ingredients will impress your friends and add a memorable twist to your party.
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Estimated Nutrition:

Calories: 64kcal (3%)Potassium: 2mgVitamin A: 2IUVitamin C: 1mg (1%)Calcium: 0.1mgIron: 0.01mg
CourseBeverage, Drinks, Shot
CuisineBeverage, Drinks, Shot
KeywordBeverage Recipe, Drink Recipe, Shot Recipe

Where it came from

The Prairie Fire is a 1980s American bar shot, born out of the spicy-shot trend that followed the rise of cinnamon liqueurs. Tequila, hot sauce, glass: the recipe is the entire concept, no decoration. The name is what it does on the way down.

It sits in a small family of hot-pepper shots: the Mexican Flag, the Tequila Slammer with hot sauce, and the Bloody Maria taken without tomato. All four lean on capsaicin to amplify the spirit and skip the sugar that softens most novelty shots.

Best ordered as one round, not a session. The Tabasco does the heavy lifting and a second pour piles on heat that the palate already cannot read.

What it tastes like

Hot sauce tang first, agave heat in the middle, a long warm finish. The Tabasco is vinegar-and-cayenne, so the second wave is salty-sour, not just hot.

Around 40 percent ABV in the glass since this is essentially a single shot of tequila. The dash of Tabasco does not move the strength but does change how the alcohol reads on the palate.

The technique

Pour one ounce of silver or gold tequila into a shot glass. Add a single dash of Tabasco hot sauce, either dropped in the centre or run around the inside rim of the glass. Drink in one.

Use silver tequila for a cleaner profile. Gold tequila adds a touch of caramel that softens the burn. Skip aged anejo: the wood notes fight the hot sauce.

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Ingredient Spotlight

The bottles that make or break this drink.

The tequila

Use
100 percent agave silver tequila (Espolon, Olmeca Altos, Cazadores).
Skip
Gold mixto tequila or budget supermarket bottles. The shot exposes them.
Why
The shot is mostly tequila. A clean agave pour is the difference between a hot shot and a hot mistake.

The Tabasco

Use
Original red Tabasco. One dash.
Skip
Sriracha. Different vinegar, much sweeter.
Why
Tabasco is a clean cayenne-and-vinegar sauce. The vinegar bite is what gives the shot its second wave.

The glass

Use
A heavy 30 ml shot glass with straight sides.
Skip
A tapered shooter glass. The shape concentrates the Tabasco at the rim.
Why
A straight-sided shot glass keeps the Tabasco distributed across the pour. A tapered glass turns the first sip into pure hot sauce.

Three Variations

Three real ways bartenders riff on this drink. Same idea, three different jackets.

The standard build

Prairie Fire, neat
One ounce silver tequila plus one dash Tabasco. Drink in one.

The chaser build

Prairie Fire with a beer back
Same shot, served with a small glass of cold light beer to chase. The beer cuts the heat and the shot reads softer for the next round.

The Mexican Flag build

Prairie Fire layered with green and white
Layer green creme de menthe at the bottom, white sambuca in the middle, and the tequila plus Tabasco on top. Three colours, three layers, same Prairie Fire on the finish.

What if I don't have…

Quick substitutions for when the bottle shop is closed.

No Tabasco?

Cholula or Crystal hot sauce. Both are vinegar-and-cayenne and substitute cleanly. Skip Sriracha and chilli oil.

No silver tequila?

Gold tequila works. Skip aged anejo or reposado. The wood notes fight the heat.

No shot glass?

A small rocks glass works. Adjust the pour to one and a half ounces if the rocks glass is much larger than a one-ounce shot.

No straight sides?

Pour the Tabasco directly into the centre of the tequila instead of running it around the rim.

Frequently Asked Questions

Direct answers to what people search for after Googling this drink.

What is in a Prairie Fire shot?

One ounce of tequila and one dash of Tabasco hot sauce in a shot glass. Two ingredients, no chaser, no garnish.

How strong is a Prairie Fire?

Around 40 percent ABV in the glass, since this is essentially a single shot of tequila. The Tabasco changes the read of the heat but not the proof.

What does a Prairie Fire taste like?

Hot sauce tang first, agave heat in the middle, a long warm finish. The vinegar in the Tabasco is what gives the shot its second wave.

Why is it called a Prairie Fire?

The name describes the burn down the chest after the shot. Bar humour from 1980s American novelty-drink culture.

Can I use a different hot sauce?

Cholula and Crystal both work. Both are vinegar-and-cayenne sauces. Skip Sriracha or chilli oil; they bring sugar or different oils that change the drink.

Should I use silver or gold tequila?

Silver for a cleaner cleaner profile. Gold tequila adds caramel that softens the burn slightly. Skip aged anejo: the wood notes fight the Tabasco.

Should I chase it?

Optional. A small glass of cold light beer cuts the heat. A glass of water also works. A salt rim on a follow-up shot is a separate convention.

Is the Prairie Fire dangerous?

It is a single shot of tequila with hot sauce. The heat is uncomfortable, not dangerous. People with stomach ulcers or chilli sensitivity should pass.

What glass should I serve it in?

A heavy 30 ml shot glass with straight sides. A tapered glass concentrates the Tabasco at the rim and overloads the first hit.

What other shots are similar?

A Mexican Flag for the layered version, a Bloody Maria taken neat for the tequila-and-tomato cousin, and a Tequila Slammer for the citrus-and-soda variant.

DL
From the Drink Lab catalogue

Drink Lab has been collecting cocktail recipes since 2013. Some we wrote ourselves, plenty came in from readers, and the rest got passed across a bar somewhere along the way.

Last updated May 8, 2026 · 1 min read

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