Guy Fieri – the spiky-haired chef, TV host and ‘Mayor of Flavortown’ – is known for his love of high-octane comfort food, packed with bold flavours and serious attitude. From unexpected umami bombs that take sauces to the next level to a simple (and tasty!) inclusion for the perfect veggie burger, his favourite ingredients might just surprise you with their complexity.
Click or scroll through our gallery to discover 19 ingredients Guy Fieri loves to cook with – counting down to his favourite of all.
We've based our ranking on the prevalence of each ingredient in Guy Fieri's recipes and on how frequently the chef references them in interviews and TV shows.
Worcestershire sauce is hard to say, and it's even harder to explain the taste. Guy Fieri likes to layer this savoury staple into burger blends, meatloaves and sauces to add a deep, tangy richness. It's made from vinegar, molasses and anchovies, and just a dash is enough to seriously boost a meal's umami factor. It’s a key ingredient in many of Fieri's dishes, from Bloody Mary flank steak to his signature Trash Can Nachos. Keep it in your cupboard to add flavour to marinades, stews and meat dishes – and always remember to add a glug when you're making a tomato-based sauce.
Creamy, tangy and tenderising, buttermilk is a Southern staple that Fieri uses in home-style favourites like fried chicken salads. As it's fermented, buttermilk works as the perfect brine to soften and flavour meat, and it also helps to create an unbeatable crunch. Beyond fried chicken, you can also fold buttermilk into dressings and dips to mellow out the spice or to add a little zing. Its gentle acidity makes it ideal for balancing the bold ingredients in comfort food classics – plus, it's also the key to fluffy pancakes, biscuits and bread.
Earthy, smoky and slightly bitter, cumin gives warmth and body to a huge range of cuisines, including Indian, Mexican, Creole and Caribbean dishes. Guy Fieri uses it liberally in almost all of his Tex-Mex and Southwest-inspired dishes, from taco fillings to Dragon’s Breath Chilli. Spicy without being fiery, cumin builds flavour fast, so keep it on hand for meat dishes, bean dishes, or anywhere you want to add depth. Powdered cumin is fine as long as it's fresh (Fieri says it's only really good for six months); however, the seeds stay fresher for longer, and toasting and grinding them creates a much stronger taste.
Fresh, zesty lime juice cuts through the richness of grilled meats, fried foods and creamy sauces, making it a go-to in Guy Fieri's kitchen arsenal. He uses it to flavour the chicken, peppers and onions he uses in his Tailgate sandwiches, and it always makes an appearance in his guacamole and ceviche. Use lime juice to balance spice or sweetness, or add a spritz of it to slow-cooked meat dishes to wake up the flavours just before serving.
It’s rare to see an episode of Fieri's show Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives that doesn’t feature at least one bacon-heavy dish; one memorable episode featured a New Mexico restaurant that served up a 9oz (255g) burger made entirely from cured pork belly. Fieri likes to use this fatty cut as a base for sauces in dishes like bacon and tomato pasta, and he crisps it up to add texture and a salty hit to dishes like mac 'n' cheese. Pancetta even makes an appearance in his signature nachos.
Fieri has spoken at length about growing up with 'hippie' parents, and the impact this had on his cooking, serving to introduce ingredients you might not expect from the tattooed chef. One of these is nutritional yeast, a heat-treated, deactivated yeast that won’t cause any sort of rise in your cooking, but will add a strong, cheesy hit of flavour, similar to Parmesan. It’s often used to make things like vegan cheese, and it's packed with B vitamins. Fieri calls it ‘hippie dust’ and loves to sprinkle it on soups, stews and even snacks like popcorn and cashew nuts.
Ginger brings a warm, peppery zing that Guy Fieri uses to wake up everything from sauces to stir-fries. To make General Guy’s Chinese Chicken, Fieri blends ginger-garlic paste into both the marinade and sauce for a double hit of flavour and heat. Minced ginger and garlic are also sautéed to make the base for his Ginger Carrot Soup – and in Dirty P’s Garlic‑Ginger Chicken Thighs, fresh ginger marinates with soy sauce and tangerine juice to create a salty, spicy, tangy glaze.
For anyone who fears fishy flavours, anchovies can seem a daunting ingredient; however, Guy Fieri knows that when used correctly, these salted fillets can elevate a dish to amazing new heights. When sliced finely and fried, anchovies disintegrate and leave an umami note in pasta sauces and stews. Mash them into dressings, balanced with lemon and made creamy with a glug of good olive oil, then drench fresh greens or blanched green beans to create an irresistible side salad. You can even blend them with nuts, herbs and cheese to create an amped-up pesto for pasta or to dress proteins.
If any ingredient could claim to be ‘definitively Italian’, Parmigiano Reggiano – or Parmesan cheese, to most English speakers – would surely be in the running. Fieri uses it liberally in his Guy-talian dishes, including his Parmesan Taters and Slamma Jamma Parmigiana, which sees creamy mozzarella dusted with grated 'Parm' to amp up the cheesy flavour. He also uses it to add a salty punch to veggie side dishes and blends it into salad dressings. Top tip: always keep the rind to drop into soups or stews for a rich flavour.
Guy Fieri hates eating eggs (he calls them 'liquid chicken'), but he acknowledges that he needs them to make many of his signature dishes. Not many people know that Fieri created a lot of healthy dairy-free dishes for his late sister during her cancer treatment – and he calls flaxseed 'the greatest hack to not using eggs'. He uses one tablespoon of flaxseed and three tablespoons of water to create something he calls a 'flax glob'. You can use it to bind dishes like meatloaf and burgers; it'll deliver structure, moisture and a hint of nutty flavour.
Panko breadcrumbs, which originated in Japan, are light, airy flakes that are traditionally used to create crispy coatings for fried foods like prawns and katsu. Unlike regular breadcrumbs, they’re made from crustless white bread and dry to a coarse crumb, delivering a crunchier, less greasy finish. Guy Fieri uses panko breadcrumbs in dishes like his Brined & Fried Chicken Tenders, where it forms a golden, ultra-crispy crust – and he also tops grilled radicchio with garlicky panko for texture. Follow his lead and use them to add crunch to mac 'n' cheese.
Spring onions – also known as scallions or green onions – offer a milder, fresher bite than regular onions, with both the white and green parts adding subtle sharpness and colour. Guy Fieri mixes chopped spring onions into the butter for his Triple D Garlic Bread, giving it a savoury flavour without overpowering the dish. He also sprinkles them over his Grilled Caribbean Chicken and kneads them into his Scallion Corn Tortillas to add colour and extra umami. They’re ideal when you want that onion taste with a lighter, more vibrant finish.
"Quinoa is my baby – quinoa hot, quinoa cold," Fieri told Food & Wine. "So nutty, has a little pop, I put it on top of salads for crunch." While he might be most associated with huge burgers and chicken wings, you might be surprised to know that Fieri is a huge fan of vegan food and grew up eating mostly vegetarian dishes at home. His favourite superfood grain makes an appearance in his signature veggie burgers; rather than beans, which can go soggy, he prefers to use cooked quinoa and brown rice, bringing a firmer structure and a nutty flavour to the mix.
From marinades to brines, salad dressings to sticky Asian glazes, vinegar forms the backbone of so many condiments – including Fieri’s own range of Flavortown sauces. Its acidic kick is used heavily in BBQ dishes, and it works particularly well to balance fatty cuts of meat. Fieri uses it in his Vinegar Brined Baby Back Ribs recipe, as well as in his Oak Town Garlic Vinegar Chicken. In the latter, he uses red wine vinegar, caramelised onions and peppers to create sweet and sour notes that cut through the richness of the chicken thighs. Try adding a dash of balsamic vinegar to tomato sauces, or add sherry vinegar to stews for a little extra lift.
Another incredibly divisive ingredient, these mini brassicas are loved by the Mayor of Flavortown; he once even went as far as saying that he couldn’t live without them. Like any vegetable, Brussels sprouts are particularly unpalatable when they’ve been overcooked – we think that boiling them should be a criminal offence. Follow Fieri’s lead and roast them, dress them in an acid like balsamic vinegar while they're still warm, then add a fat. Pancetta is the perfect pairing, but walnuts or Parmesan shavings would work beautifully in a vegetarian dish.
Garlic is a staple of Mediterranean cuisine, so a love of this ingredient is in Fieri's blood; it shows up in nearly every dish he touches, whether raw, roasted, powdered or minced. In fact, his great-grandfather, Giuseppe Fieri, emigrated to the US from Italy and opened an Italian restaurant called Johnny Garlic’s in 1996. Blended with spring onions, Parmesan, parsley, hot sauce and butter, garlic is the main ingredient in Fieri's world-famous Triple D Garlic Bread – and the chef also adds five raw cloves to the brine for his juicy pork chops. It adds depth, warmth, and the unmistakable savouriness that only garlic can bring.
As you'd expect of someone who launched his own line of spicy condiments, Guy Fieri is a hot sauce fanatic. Hot sauce is like flavour rocket fuel, and he often dashes it into marinades, glazes and sauces for chicken. It's a quick fix he uses to add heat, tang and complexity to any spicy dish – and he also adds it to the butter for his aforementioned famous garlic bread. Guy favours a vinegary kick to brighten richer foods; look for Louisiana-style sauces to replicate his go-to balance of flavours, or experiment with Thai sriracha or good old Tabasco for heat with an addictive sour edge.
Chicken powder is Fieri’s secret weapon for adding a savoury punch to soups, sauces and even dry rubs. A dehydrated seasoning made from real chicken stock, it offers an instant umami hit, minus the extra spices and herbs you get from bouillon. Fieri calls it a ‘magic flavour enhancer’ and stirs it into chillis, stews and rice dishes to wake everything up and deepen the meaty flavours. Keep it on hand to add an extra layer of richness to a dish without overpowering the other ingredients – but be sure to check the salt levels before adding it in.
"If I had to pick one thing that I couldn't live without, it'd probably be soy sauce," Fieri told Today. Savoury, salty and deeply umami, soy sauce is one of the chef's go-to flavour bombs; he even used it to cook one of his first meals, a rib-eye steak that he made for his dad when he was around eight years old. These days, he uses it to bring intensity to marinades, stir-fries and sauces, and in dishes such as his spicy tangerine beef with soy-glazed green beans. Fieri loves how it adds richness without dominating other flavours, anchoring dishes with a salty depth.
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