at what temp?Because the pH is below 4.6 you can give them a water bath for 30 min if packed hot or 60 min if room temp to make shelf stable.
at what temp?Because the pH is below 4.6 you can give them a water bath for 30 min if packed hot or 60 min if room temp to make shelf stable.
what is your favorite food to put hot sauces on?
Wings, pizza, eggs, burgers, gumbo, chili, nachos, tacos, burritos, rub it on a steak before I grill it, I use it to marinade various meats, use it to do a wet-rub if I'm smoking, rice, fish, sushi, sandwiches...Pretty much everything I consume is turned up. If I wasn't lactos-intolerant I'd probably put it on cereal lol.
Awesome looking salsa 'verde' by the way!
So I found myself with an abundance of peppers this summer and decided to give a few sauces a try. So far, not bad, but on my most recent batch I was given a few poblanos after I had already started fermenting the peppers. Would I be able to roast these poblanos and add them at blending for some extra flavor? Or will having non-fermented peppers give this a drastically short shelf life/cause other issues?
do folks here have thoughts or feeling about vinegar vs. brine when it comes to blending?
for my sauces, i need to add some sort of liquid when i blend otherwise the sauce turns out way too thick. i wonder what other liquids could be used... beer? wine? spirits? acidic fruit juice? coffee?!?
personally, i heat the blended mush until it boils at the edges, mix thoroughly to ensure everything has reached pasteurization temps, let cool, fill, and store bottles in beer fridge. no need to fill bottles hot, IMO, hot sauces are pretty resilient thanks to their low pH and lack of fermentables (lacto and other bugs already consumed those in primary).
what is your favorite food to put hot sauces on? many mornings i make myself a breakfast burrito (scrambled eggs and cheese on a tortillas, with occasional avocado and/or leftovers mixed in) and i couldn't imagine eating one without some homemade heat.
If you get back up there try camping at FJ Mclain near Houghton in the UP.I just finishing putting my first batch of fermented hot sauce together about an hour before even thinking to look on here for tips! I'm excited, but thinking back on how (not) well my first beer turned out I'm cautiously optimistic.
Garlic, ginger, orange bell, a couple mini sweet reds, some carrot, a smoked/dried New Mexico chili, 2 delicious peaches, 6 or 8 habaneros and a scotch bonnet. 3% brine. I'm hoping for a sweet heat that is an appealing shade of brown lol.
I need to quickly figure out how to get an airlock attached to the lid of the mason jar though. I thought it would be as easy as drill a hole, insert grommet/gasket thing, stick airlock in. Come to find out (after everything was in the brine) my largest drill bit is too smallthat will be a project for tomorrow.
Anyway, @Yooper my wife and I just got back from a road trip up through the UP and loved it! We camped at Sleeping Bear Dunes a couple of nights, Spent another couple of days camping and kayaking around Pictured Rocks and made our way back home to Nebraska. I love it up there...I'm not a big fan of those Pasty things though lol
no innoculation needed, plenty of lacto hanging out on the peppers.So back on topic, do you have to inoculate with Lactobacillus? Or just rely on nature?
DO ITI always have more hot peppers than I can eat and this might be a good alternative.
to date the majority of my sauces have been brine-only and they've turned out great. not too funky nor salty, but that's just according to taste buds around here (which do skew heavily towards salt). like you, i've recently moved to a 50/50'ish mix and plan on sticking with that.All brine would be too salty/funky, but need more liquid to get the thickness correct.
so this is probably a topic for another thread ("the debate thread"?), but: i don't buy into the live cultures/probiotics thing. lacto cannot survive your stomach acids, so by the time the probiotic gets to where it can be absorbed (small intestine) there is no difference between the recently-killed lacto from a probiotic and the long-dead lacto in my pasteurized sauce. since i don't care about having live lacto in my food, i'd rather have the benefit of stability that pasteurization brings. but this is just me, i fully realize many many people seek out live cultures for their (purported) benefits. i also acknowledge that i could be full of crapIf you're storing in the fridge anyway, why pasteurize? You lose any benefit from the 'live' cultures
doing half pound of habanero's with a half pound of scotch bonnets, 4 cloves of garlic and a quarter of an onion.
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wow, your heat tolerance is clearly higher than mine! your recipe is essentially all hot peppers, and no carriers/fillers. both habaneros and bonnets are listed in the 100K to 350K SHU range... should put some hair on your chest.
my hot sauces are typically 40-50% hot peppers and the rest carrier/filler. other than garlic, my favorite non-pepper ingredient is pineapple. i'll be making ver.2 of my pineapple/habanero/garlic/ginger sauce for my next batch.
lol, like i said your tolerance is clearly higher than mine - and now we know why, COVID. have your senses of taste and smell come back to "normal", or did COVID permanently affect those?Da Bomb Insanity sauce and that sauce is about at my limit.
my hot sauces are typically 40-50% hot peppers and the rest carrier/filler. other than garlic, my favorite non-pepper ingredient is pineapple. i'll be making ver.2 of my pineapple/habanero/garlic/ginger sauce for my next batch.
I'd say I'm about 99% back to my normal smell and taste. There's been recent times when I've had my favorite foods and they taste like I remember them so that's great. Da Bomb isn't a sauce that I'd put any anything on a daily basis however it's fun to have friends try when they come over for wings.lol, like i said your tolerance is clearly higher than mine - and now we know why, COVID. have your senses of taste and smell come back to "normal", or did COVID permanently affect those?
RE: the Hot Ones gauntlet, i might be able to survive the first half, but those upper sauces look painful. if i was ever invited on Hot Ones (not that i ever would be), i would skip Da Bomb - it's pure extract and no one enjoys it. seems like just pain, the common reaction to it is "why? just, WHY?!?". i've got enough such questions bouncing around my head![]()
a few options were discussed above. as far as i know no one has tried beer yet. i bet a sour/lambic-style beer would work well!I have been wondering if I could make fermented hot sauce without using the brine which is a bit too salty for me. At the same time, I don't want to use only vinegar to blend with the fermented peppers. Any other suggestions for liquids to blend with other than brine or vinegar? Would beer work (given that this is a beer web site after all)?
I have been wondering if I could make fermented hot sauce without using the brine which is a bit too salty for me. At the same time, I don't want to use only vinegar to blend with the fermented peppers. Any other suggestions for liquids to blend with other than brine or vinegar? Would beer work (given that this is a beer web site after all)?
I have been wondering if I could make fermented hot sauce without using the brine which is a bit too salty for me. At the same time, I don't want to use only vinegar to blend with the fermented peppers. Any other suggestions for liquids to blend with other than brine or vinegar? Would beer work (given that this is a beer web site after all)?