Ok guys this is my first post outside of the welcome thread. I told myself I would read this entire thread before replying, and I will but for honesty's sake, I am doing this from page 8.
I've loved hot peppers and hot sauce most of my life and always tried to keep some peppers growing throughout the summer. About a month ago I entered a chili cookoff and thought to myself, wouldn't it sweeten the deal if I made and brought my own hot sauce. That way I could serve a chili that pleased the average consumer that doesn't appreciate spice or the complexities it brings to the table, and offer something on the side for those that want it.
So I went in the back yard and collected about 3 lbs of red fresnos, removed the stems but kept the seeds and inner walls intact. I chopped them rough while wearing gloves, added a few cloves of raw garlic, ans about 1/8 cup of sea salt and gave it a nice swim in a big cup with a stick blender. I then divided this equally, and blended half with distilled white vinegar, and the other half with Bragg Apple Cider Vinegar hoping for a milder flavor. The result, both sauces had amazing color, tasted fresh, vibrant, and pungent. Not to mention spicy as hell. So there I had 2 sauces using the 3 common ingredients of all my favorites and something wasn't quite right. Not having time to sort it out, I mixed up 2 cups of cold filtered water and some xanathan gum, got it nice and thick, and incorporated it into each bottle of sauce, leaving the Bragg sauce in my fridge for me, and the white distilled came to the cookoff for the rubes.
The reason for this long winded intro is, I stayed up that night asking myself why my sauce didn't taste like the ones I prefer from the store. As my many galons of kimchi and saurkraut sat in the fridge, a lightbulb went off and I thought, crap, maybe I should age these things. So the next day I took 3 lbs of habanero, and 2 orange holland peppers, chopped them up, gave them the stick blender love and put them in a 2 quart jar with a rubber seal and clamp down style locking lid that I had previously used to make saurkraut. The problem, as it occurred to me at the time was, in kraut and kimchi making, I had always had more than enough liquid from the salting and hand squeezing process that came before sticking it in the jar. What do I do? Against all better jusgment, I mixed up a few cups of filtered cold water with 1/4 cup of korean sea salt that I use for kimchi and decided to pour it on top of my puree (now known as mash) until there was 1.5 to 2 inches of air between liquid and lid, and I sealed it up.
Now in full disclosure, I've only been making kimchi about 6 months. Ive used the same jars, and I have filled them nearly to the top every time. Every time I've had liquid seep out to the point where I have to replace the plate under the jar on a daily basis. My turnip and my daikon radish kimchi's needed to be opened and drained every other day just to keep the liquid down. I live in TX so the heat has been rather abundant. When the liquid seeps from a cruciferous vegetable well......my wife wants me to buy another fridge and do my business in the garage. That said, I have never seen mold, and after the 3 week ferment and another 3 to 5 weeks mellowing in the fridge, the fermenting sulphur smell departs and I have been left with wonderful amazing kimchi that blew my mind, and kraut that was a bit too salty but was crisp and perfectly fermented.
The reason I am detailing all of this kimchi and kraut background is because I am likely the dumbest guy in the room. I don't have advanced degrees and I have no equipment. I tried making wine about 10 years ago, got O2 into it during bottling and turned the entire venture nasty and bitter. Fermenting vegetables is easy. My habaneros have had no starter. Just sitting in their jar. With less sugars, they haven't even bubbled over. I was tempted to open the lid and stir or smell as I did with previous ferments but something told me to hold off. Rather, whenever the solids float to the top, I give the jar a swirl, and remix. In a couple of hours, the solids are back on top, full of bubbles and orange brightness. What little outgassing there is, smells like wonderfully pungent peppers to me. I then discovered this forum and realized by blind dumb lick, I did a lot of things right, with my first batch of fermenting peppers. Rather than time, I will use reaction as my guide. When I swirl, and the peppers no longer float to the top, I will know it is time to make sauce. As this is my first batch, I won't worry about it being too early. Other research I have done indicates a 3 week ferment as being sufficient (for flavor profile, not shelf sustainability). When I taste the product, I will decide if acid in the form of limes is needed, or sweetness in the form of mango puree is needed. I will blend it down one more time and mix with enough xanathan gum to get the right texture and hopefully be able to bottle enough for my friends and family in time to not have to buy them Christmas presents.
The long and short being, this doesn't seem complicated. Mold and yeast and starter cultures oh my. I have found in my limited experience, that the K.I.S.S method is rather failsafe. But definitely welcome your comments as I am a noob at this.
salsalady said:
Hi Y'all, I just read (most) of the thread...(skipped some of the technical chemestry stuff...
)
Just a couple quick things to post and then it's back to reading....
Hot Stuff and Dr Pacheco- I think the Dr has an airlock with a large bung-type rubber stopper on it. I have one like it. If I'm correct, DrP can remove the large rubber stopper and take the plastic airlock which should have a diameter more like 3/8th" to the hardware store and get a smaller 1/2" or so rubber grommet like HS described. If you have a really good hardware store (a mom-n-pop-type) you could probably take the lid you want to use in with the airlock, and they would maybe even drill the hole for you and fit it with the proper size grommet.
We have stores like that around here, but then again...we live in the middle of no-where
For clarification-
RM- you mentioned putting things in the dishwasher for sterilization. Maybe I didn't read it right, but do you put the bottle, reducer, and cap in the DW? Usually when doing hot packing only the bottle needs to be sanitized as the rest is taken care of by inversion. I may not have understood the post correctly.
Large pot- it isn't spelled out, but to help the noobies...it should be a NON-REACTIVE pot. Stainless steel, glass, enamel (
if there are NO CHIPS), do not use aluminum, cast iron, copper...
Bleach water- RM, the original post says to fill the pot with HOT water and bleach. Every health food class or course I've seen says to use luke-warm or cold water as hot water actually reduces or eliminates the effectiveness of bleach. Each health district is different, so I'm just sharing what WA state regs are. I had thought that all states had similar regs for bleach. Please let me know if your health codes are different. Just trying to keep accurate information for when people ask questions. Thanks.
Thanks for the great tutorial and...lively....discussions.
I have a gallon+ batch just started using some different ingredients than I've seen here. Will let you know how it turns out.
Thanks again~
As a pool owner I can tell you that higher temps reduce the effectiveness of chlorine because it dissipates faster. All of my swimming pool chlorination came from bleach I bought at Walmart and I had crystal clear water year round. That said, because high temps affect and reduce the effectiveness of bleach, doesn't mean hot water should not be used. This is purely my opinion and I understand the healthj codes. When I was a teenager I worked as a dishwasher in a nursing home and they take sanitation seriously given the low germ tolerance of the elderly. We had a sanitation chart showing the bleach PPM to water at varying degrees. While I don't remember the exact ammounts, per the chart, as the temp went up, so did the bleach requirements. That said, the sanitization requirements were to use water temp of 140 degrees or higher, while adding the specified amont of bleach. I don't think its wrong to have a low temp, but if you can achieve the same level of oxidation with a higher water temp, I cannot see an argument against it.