Josh Simonds
www.nixfrixshun.com
www.facebook.com/NFSspeedshop
www.bicycle-coach.com
Vsalon Fromage De Tête
Try the chipotle peppers in adobo sauce from the Mexican food section of the grocery store in your bbq sauce.
Trader Joe's Zhoug sauce is also quite good. Not super hot, but very flavorful and great on a number of different things. I often use it to spice up hummus on pita bread.
Link to TJ's site
Well, I think the hot sauce turned out pretty well; kind of made things up on the fly, but the broad strokes are around 10 habaneros, a caramelized onion, roasted carrots, roasted poblanos, 8-10 cloves of garlic and some apple cider vinegar:
IMG_0455.jpg
It is definitely a thick sauce. You get a lot of carrot and caramelized onion on the front, but then get a nice kick of habanero that keeps you coming back for more. For a first try, I will definitely take it. I think for the next one, I will do a thinner sauce with just pepper, onion, and garlic (plus spices and vinegar obviously).
My dog kindly decided to bury her bone in the, admittedly lowish, pot containing several jalapeno seeds that were on their way to sprouting. Still, she didn't discriminate and re-buried the bone in a pot containing sunflowers, who had just poked their way through the soil. Being the endearing and over optimistic sought, she came and dropped her ball with a wagging tail in one of the plant pots when I was fixing up her mess. Dogs...
Regret – Wiltshire Chilli Farm
At the Borough market, wiltshire farm is selling super hot chilli sauce.
Regret is made from Ghost peppers.
They also make some from Trinidad Scorpions and Carolina Reapers.
IMG_6594.jpg
No pictures, but made a different type of hot sauce from my first try; it is simpler with the ingredients only being peppers (four different types), rice wine vinegar, apple cider vinegar, onion, and garlic. It is way hotter. The types of hot peppers are my scotch bonnets I grew (which didn't turn out hot), my chocolate scorpions I grew, my habaneros I grew, and my friends ghost peppers.
Just a little late with the first harvest...a couple will be headed to dcama.
rw saunders
hey, how lucky can one man get.
End of the season is coming...Dave...dropping a few in the mail tomorrow.
rw saunders
hey, how lucky can one man get.
I’m going to explore making a fermented pepper sauce with these bad boys and I will blend them with a variety of more subtle varieties in order to tone things down a bit if possible. Does anybody have any tips or recipes to share? The sauce would be used for chicken tenders, dip, etc. Thanks
How to Make Fermented Hot Sauce - Nourished Kitchen
rw saunders
hey, how lucky can one man get.
A couple years ago, I made some fermented sauce from my Tepins. They are certainly hot, but probably not as hot as yours. No one steals more than one pepper though.
I fermented only half the batch. Both were good.
The sauce has mellowed in heat and gained in flavor over the years since I made it.
It is important to keep the peppers below the surface of the brine because mold can grow on the surface.
For this, I used a French press. I think I fermented at room temp a couple months if I recall.
IMG_0156.jpg
IMG_0162.JPG
IMG_0163.JPG
Mark Walberg
Building bike frames for fun since 1973.
rw saunders
hey, how lucky can one man get.
I’ll tell a story about myself. I went to a local (think hole in the wall) burger joint yesterday for a cheeseburger. I asked what kind of cheese they had and waitress said American, Swiss, Cheddar and goat pepper jack. Never having had goat pepper jack I said yes. The heat was much more than I expected and when I asked her about the goat cheese she laughed and said not goat GHOST pepper cheese.
Mike
Mike Noble
Fermentation is the way to go, particularly for the really hot peppers. For instance I have found that as the heat mellows in a habanero ferment, all the latent fruit flavors are amplified and really stand out.
I recommend a digital scale to nail the salt/water/chili ratio.
If you have access to some nice sauerkraut, you can leach off some of the liquid and it will kick start the lacto-fermentation process.
To elaborate on the flavor: fermentation creates a broad spectrum of flavor compounds; your carrot tastes even more like a carrot, and a little sour/tangy too. Often there are surprises.
For stuff that’s not too hot, say Cherry peppers: just chop them into rings and plunge them into a vinegar pickle. Put it on pizza, sandwiches, etc.
Yessir Doug...the two skinny, pink ones...the other one is a 7-pot Jonah. I’m waiting for a taste report from dcama.
rw saunders
hey, how lucky can one man get.
Bookmarks