Quick Answer

How do you thicken buffalo sauce?

Four effective methods: (1) More butter — the most authentic method; each additional tablespoon adds body and richness. (2) Cornstarch slurry — 1/2 teaspoon cornstarch dissolved in 1 teaspoon water, whisked into simmering sauce, thickens quickly without changing flavor. (3) Reduction — simmer sauce for 3–5 minutes to evaporate water; concentrates flavor but sharpens the acidity. (4) Xanthan gum — 1/4 teaspoon per cup, creates commercial-grade cling without altering flavor. For wing tossing, more butter is the tastiest solution. For applications where dairy isn't wanted, xanthan gum is the professional choice.

Why Buffalo Sauce Gets Thin

Buffalo sauce thins out for predictable reasons:

  • Wrong hot sauce to butter ratio: Classic buffalo uses 2:1 (hot sauce to butter). If you add too much hot sauce relative to butter, the emulsion becomes thin and watery. The butter is what provides body.
  • Broken emulsion: If the butter and hot sauce separate (the sauce "breaks"), the fat layer sits on top and the liquid is thin underneath. Re-emulsifying by whisking over low heat restores thickness.
  • Added water: Some recipes add a splash of water or use lower-acid hot sauces with more water content. This dilutes the sauce.
  • Store-bought sauce: Many commercial hot sauces have significant water as an ingredient. Using these as a base produces a thinner sauce than using a more concentrated hot sauce.

Thickening Methods in Detail

Method 1: Add More Butter

The most natural fix. Add 1 tablespoon of butter at a time to the warm sauce, whisking constantly. Each tablespoon of butter adds meaningful body and cling. This is the "correct" fix for buffalo sauce that's too thin from an under-buttered ratio — you're correcting the recipe rather than adding a thickener. Target: until the sauce coats a spoon and runs off slowly rather than immediately.

Method 2: Cornstarch Slurry

Dissolve 1/2 teaspoon cornstarch in 1 teaspoon cold water (it won't dissolve in hot liquid). Whisk the slurry into the simmering buffalo sauce. Simmer 2 minutes, stirring constantly, until the sauce thickens. Start conservative — cornstarch is more effective than it seems and over-thickened sauce becomes gummy.

Cornstarch is neutral in flavor and works quickly. The resulting sauce has a slightly glossy, commercial-style appearance. The body is different from butter-thickened sauce — starch creates a different viscosity than fat, more sticky than rich.

Method 3: Reduction

Simmer the sauce in a small saucepan over medium-low heat, stirring frequently. Evaporating water concentrates the sauce. Every 2 minutes of simmering noticeably reduces volume and increases concentration. Caution: this also concentrates the acidity and saltiness. A reduction-thickened sauce will taste sharper and saltier — factor this in before reducing significantly. Best for situations where you want both concentrated flavor and thickness.

Method 4: Xanthan Gum

Used in commercial hot sauces (Frank's Buffalo Wing Sauce contains xanthan gum) for exactly this purpose. Add 1/4 teaspoon per cup of sauce. Whisk vigorously — xanthan gum clumps badly if not dispersed immediately. A small blender or immersion blender eliminates clumping. The result is commercial-grade cling and body without altering flavor or requiring heat. No dairy, no added fat, no acidity change. Ideal for dairy-free thickening.

Method Comparison

Buffalo Sauce Thickening Methods Comparison

MethodFlavor ImpactDairy-Free?DifficultyBest For
More butter Richer, more complex No (dairy) Easy Correcting under-buttered sauce
Cornstarch slurry Neutral Yes Medium Quick fix without changing flavor
Reduction Sharper, more concentrated Yes Easy Concentrated flavor + thickness
Xanthan gum None Yes Medium (clumping risk) Commercial cling, dairy-free

When Each Method Is Best

For wing tossing: More butter is the superior choice — it makes the wings taste better. If the sauce is thin, the answer is almost always to add butter until the ratio is right.

For dipping sauce: Cornstarch slurry creates a thicker, more dippable consistency. A sauce that's perfect for tossing wings may be too thin to serve effectively as a dip — slight thickening with cornstarch makes it dippable without changing flavor.

For vegan/dairy-free: Xanthan gum is the professional solution for commercial cling without dairy. Used by food manufacturers universally.

For a concentrated, intense variation: Reduction thickens and concentrates simultaneously — good when you want a more intense, coating sauce for pizza, dipping, or applications where concentrated flavor is valuable.

💡 The Fastest Fix: Let It Cool Slightly

Before adding any thickener, try this: remove buffalo sauce from heat and let it sit for 2–3 minutes. Butter-based sauces thicken noticeably as they cool slightly. A sauce that seems thin at boiling temperature may be exactly right at serving temperature. Toss wings when sauce is warm but not boiling — the slightly cooled sauce clings better than very hot sauce anyway.

Frequently Asked Questions

Not directly — raw flour tastes starchy and needs to be cooked out. If you want to use flour, make a roux first: melt 1 teaspoon butter, whisk in 1 teaspoon flour, cook 1 minute (this cooks out the raw flour taste), then whisk in the buffalo sauce. This incorporates the flour evenly. The result is slightly heavier and more starchy than a cornstarch-thickened sauce. Cornstarch (which can be dissolved in cold water and added directly) is more convenient and produces a cleaner result.