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Scotch Bonnet: One-Pot Weeknight Recipes

9 tested one-pot weeknight recipes that use scotch bonnet. Use up what's in the fridge, build a meal plan around what's on sale, or answer the eternal question: what can I make with the scotch bonnet I bought and forgot about?

Spice & Simmer keeps 9 recipes that call for scotch bonnet on hand. This page exists so that when you find scotch bonnet in your fridge, your cart, or on sale at the store, you can walk straight to a real one-pot weeknight dinner instead of staring at a generic search results page.

Where Scotch Bonnet fits on a weeknight

In our library, scotch bonnet shows up most often in Seafood dishes — a good signal of where it tends to feel most at home on a weeknight plate. You will see it lean into Jamaican recipes more than any other tradition, though the ingredient travels well across cuisines. And it pairs naturally with the Skillet & One-Pan technique — that's the cook method most of these recipes use.

How we use scotch bonnet

Every recipe in this collection treats scotch bonnet as a real ingredient with a job to do — never as filler, never as a garnish that you could leave out without anyone noticing. We tested each recipe with the ingredient at the center of the dish, swapped substitutions only where they clearly worked, and noted the ones where scotch bonnet is genuinely the star versus the ones where it's part of an ensemble.

If you bought scotch bonnet for one specific recipe and have leftovers, scan the cards above for a second use — most of these dinners are designed to clear out a half-used package on the second night, which is the quiet superpower of cooking from an ingredient list rather than a meal-plan list.

Top categories that use scotch bonnet

Seafood (3) · Side (2) · Chicken (1) · Goat (1)

Top cuisines that use scotch bonnet

Jamaican (9)

Top cook methods that use scotch bonnet

skillet (4) · curry (3) · stir-fry (1) · rice-bowl (1)

Shopping & storage notes

Buy scotch bonnet when it looks fresh and in season — that's when it's cheapest and tastes the most like itself. For weeknight cooks, the most useful skill is portioning at the moment you bring it home: split the package into recipe-sized portions, label and freeze what you won't use this week, and you've removed the single biggest blocker to cooking from your fridge instead of from a takeout menu. The recipes above are all designed to use a normal portion of scotch bonnet — no oddly large or specialty quantities.

From here, you can browse every ingredient in the library, jump to cook methods, or filter to dinners ready in 30 minutes or less.