I Recreated Nara Smith's Famous DIY Condiments To Find Out If They're Genuinely Better Than Store-Bought, And I Didn't Expect These Results

She's cooking in Chanel, she's grocery shopping in Dolce & Gabbana! Who is she, you might ask? She's Nara Smith, of course!

Nara Smith slicing strawberries in a kitchen. She wears a blue, feathery, sleeveless top. The image has engagement metrics and hashtags: #EasyRecipe #homecooking
naraazizasmith / TikTok / Via tiktok.com

Over the past year, the former model and mother of three has become HUGELY popular on TikTok, with over 9 million followers, and captured the attention of millions of viewers per video. Viewers are fascinated by her family, cooking, and association with the "tradwife" aesthetic. From bubble gum to cola, she's making everything from scratch and sometimes even ruffling some feathers in the process — like when she made DIY sunscreen this summer and was critiqued by doctors and skincare pros.

Nara Smith and a man cook together in a kitchen, with Nara chopping vegetables on a wooden board. The TikTok interface shows their video has 995.9K likes and 9,532 comments

In a video with over 26 million views on TikTok alone, Nara Smith did a "pantry restock," tagged with the #easyrecipes hashtag. In the video, she made four American kitchen staples most of us would just pick up from the grocery store: ketchup, barbecue sauce, hot sauce, and last but definitely not least, ranch dressing.

A person in a kitchen wearing an off-the-shoulder dress is filling squeeze bottles with a liquid substance over a cutting board

Her ultra-polished, maternal persona is the definition of aspirational...but how doable are her cooking videos, really? And most importantly, is it worth the effort? I decided to find out the only way I know how: a condiment cooking SHOWDOWN.

Various condiments, including barbecue sauce, ketchup, hot sauce, and ranch dressing, arranged on a kitchen counter with spoons in small jars
Meg Sullivan

My apron is on, my hair is tied back, and the condiment ingredients (and their store-bought counterparts) are all assembled; I'm ready to get cooking, Nara-style.

Person in a kitchen with various cooking ingredients on a counter, posing with a playful facial expression. Not a celebrity

FIRST UP: KETCHUP

Three-photo compilation showing a person squeezing tomato paste into a saucepan, adding honey, and then pouring liquid from a measuring cup into the saucepan

This sauce was the simplest of the four to recreate with just three main ingredients and no knife skills or special equipment required.

Three photos show ketchup being made: whisked in a pot, scraped with a spatula, and then poured into a glass jar
Meg Sullivan

NEXT UP: HOT SAUCE

Two images of the author making hot sauce, chopping Fresno chili peppers, and a pot with the peppers, garlic and black peppercorns

Be sure to have your vent hood or kitchen fan on; the vinegar and heat of the peppers is pungent and could irritate your eyes!

Three-step process for making hot sauce: boiling sliced red peppers and garlic, blending the cooked mixture, and pouring the blended hot sauce into a container

NEXT UP: BARBECUE SAUCE

Three steps of preparing a barbecue sauce with ingredients including ketchup, vinegar, brown sugar, and spices being added to a pot

Double, bubble, toil, and trouble!

Someone cooking barbecue sauce on a stovetop, then pouring it into a jar

AND, FINALLY: RANCH DRESSING

Someone chopping scallions, preparing fresh dill, and then chopping the dill on a wooden cutting board

This condiment took veryyy little time to make and smelled amazing from the fresh herbs and lemon.

Three-step process of preparing a herb dip with chopped green onions, dill, and sour cream in a clear bowl on a kitchen counter

They call Nara ranch cause she be dressing.

Meg Sullivan

Before I share my final results and ratings, let's discuss the money side of our experiment, Nara's homemade vs. storebought.

Spoons with BBQ sauce, ketchup, hot sauce, and ranch arranged on a cloth, each with blue tape labels showing different taste ratings out of ten
Meg Sullivan

First, you'll find the overall cost of each store-bought condiment, broken down further into its cost per ounce — I used this to compare the value of the homemade condiments to the store-bought ones.

Table showing prices of store-bought condiments: ketchup ($2.39 for 14 oz), barbecue sauce ($2.99 for 18 oz), hot sauce ($5.99 for 5 oz), and ranch dressing ($5.99 for 16 oz)
Meg Sullivan / Google

Before I did that, however, I had to use ALL of my high school algebra skills to determine each homemade condiment's cost per ounce. Here's an overwhelming spreadsheet to show you what I did:

Summary of ingredient lists for ketchup, barbecue sauce, hot sauce, and ranch dressing with respective quantities, prices, and totals

Just take my word for it. The price per ounce of homemade ketchup is $0.61.

Meg Sullivan / Google

Here is a graph summarizing the price per ounce cost differences for each condiment, Nara's version (purple) and store-bought (yellow):

Bar chart comparing cost per ounce of homemade and store-bought condiments that shows homemade is more expensive for ketchup, barbecue, but cheaper for hot sauce and ranch is about the same

As you can see, there was a HUGE range for store-bought price per ounce vs. homemade.

Meg Sullivan / Google

So, finally, it's time to taste and decide — once and for all — if Nara is right about making your own condiments

Woman in a polka-dot dress chops herbs on a wooden board in a kitchen
Naraazizasmith / TikTok / Via tiktok.com

With the sauces prepared and the cost of each ingredient and condiment weighed out, all I needed to start my saucy evaluation was an accompaniment to these sauces that even Nara Smith would approve of...so I made homemade french fries.

French fries on parchment paper surrounded by jars of ranch, hot sauce, BBQ sauce, and ketchup with store-bought condiments in the background
Meg Sullivan

Finally, it was time to taste and decide — once and for all — if Nara is right about making your own condiments.

Here are the criteria I took into consideration during my taste test:

Overall taste (out of 5)

Ease (out of 5)

Value (out of 5)

I also rated each condiment's similarity (out of 5) to the store-bought, but I kept these ratings separate from the overall score because a condiment — I'm looking at you, ranch — might taste different from the original in a good way. I didn't want a poor similarity score to impact the overall score negatively.

🍅 KETCHUP REVIEW:

Four jars of homemade sauces (hot sauce, sea sauce, ketchup, and BBQ) with lids labeled in blue tape and a plate displaying samples of each sauce

OVERALL SCORE FOR KETCHUP: 3.7/5

Overall taste: 4/5

Ease: 5/5

Value: 2/5

Similarity: 3/5

🍖 BARBECUE SAUCE REVIEW:

Four open jars of homemade sauces labeled Ranch, Hot, BBQ, and Garlic BBQ with corresponding samples on a white plate in front

OVERALL SCORE FOR BARBECUE SAUCE: 3/5

Overall taste: 3/5

Ease: 4/5

Value: 2/5

Similarity: 2/5

🌶️ HOT SAUCE REVIEW:

Four jars of homemade sauces with labeled lids on a counter. A white plate in the foreground shows small portions of the sauces for tasting

OVERALL SCORE FOR HOT SAUCE: 4/5

Overall taste: 4/5

Ease: 3/5

Value: 5/5

Similarity: 3/5

🌱 RANCH DRESSING REVIEW:

Two close-up images show French fries with different dipping sauces. In the background, there are fries, ketchup, and other condiments on a table

OVERALL RANCH DRESSING SCORE: 4.3/5

Overall taste: 5/5

Ease: 4/5

Value: 4/5

Similarity: 2/5

FINAL TAKEAWAYS:

Left image: Woman in polka dot dress adding salt to a pot. Right image: Woman in apron adding seasoning to a pot of tomato sauce

We're basically twins!

Naraazizasmith / TikTok / Meg Sullivan

If you enjoy cooking, definitely try making condiments like Nara! And if you like ranch, you simply MUST try making your own with Nara's recipe. If you are a ketchup fan, however, keep your pantry stocked up with the o.g., store-bought version because there's nothing like it.

With the highest overall score, Nara's ranch dressing is the homemade condiment I was most impressed with, both for its flavor and appearance, which I thought were better than the store-bought ranch and for its competitive price per ounce! I will 100% percent follow Nara's example and make my own ranch dressing from now on. Are you with me?

The biggest letdown for me was the homemade barbeque sauce. With Worcestershire sauce and brown sugar, I thought its flavor would pass the grocery store version with flying colors, but sadly, the store-bought one was more balanced, sweet, and tangy than the one I made at home. Hopefully, no one will make me rescind my chef card for it.

The hot sauce was another pleasant surprise for me. Cooking with hot peppers can be intimidating for people unfamiliar with them, but Nara's hot sauce uses an approachable recipe and straightforward method to introduce you to the world of chilies. With only three ingredients, this homemade hot sauce had a big payoff.

My feelings about the ketchup are mixed. I preferred the texture of the homemade, but it differed a lot from the smooth, store-bought version we know and love. The same goes for the taste.

But did I answer my initial question: Is making condiments at home instead of just buying them worth it? I want to know what you think. Let me know in the comments below.