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Candied Jalapenos & Habaneros

Been busy processing my peppers since I had to pick them all do to frost. I was candying some today and I decided to take some pics & vids and share my simple recipes for it.

First the Jalapenos.

Jalapenos_bag.JPG


They are fair sized for Jalapenos.

Jalapenos_size.JPG


First thing we need is to get the sugar going. I'm using white cane sugar(Sucrose) so I really want to invert it so I'll have fructose, and glucose.
Which are simpler sugars ,sweeter tasting ,and much better are preserving our peppers.

sugar.JPG


Here I have 3 cups white sugar, 2 cups water ,2 table spoons apple cider vinegar, and 1 teaspoon salt.
You can substitute practically any food grade acid you want for the vinegar. Lemon and or lime juice also
work great. But it can't be skipped it(Plus heat) is what catalyzes the inversion. You will what to bring the
mixture to a boil, and let it simmer about 30 minutes. If the bubbles start to become "larger" during the
30 minutes then drip some more water in., but not enough to stop the simmer.

(I used about 3 pounds of whole Jalapenos)
Ok while that's simmer you should slice your jalapenos. As you candy them they are going to shrink a lot.
So you will want to cut them fairly thick.

Jalapenos_cut_thick.JPG



Before you add your peppers to the hot sugar be sure to boil it till the bubbles start to become "larger".
Once you add the peppers the sugar will stop boiling and become very luquidy.

Add_peppers.JPG


Only add enough of the peppers to so that the top is out of the sugar. Like the picture above. As the sugar boils the bubbles will get large enough to
cover more of the peppers add the rest as it "raises"

This is what it should look like while it's cooking, but before it's done.

Jalapenos cooking

While+cooking.JPG


You will know when it's done when the sugars "texture" changes like shown below.

They're ready

Jalapenos_done.JPG


And some close ups on the the candied peppers texture after-wards.

Texture_01.JPG

Texture_02.JPG


Ok that's all for the jalapenos, I'm going to reply to this post with the Habaneros.
 
Geeme made dried candied peppers by laying the candied peppers on parchment paper and drying in the oven until brittle. 
 
But did she blend them????? I think not!!!!!
 
No, she ate them like chips. I would think the chips would grind ok when fresh, but would clump over time.


Ground dried candied peppers on ice cream sounds like the bomb. Not Da Bomb, that tastes yucky...


Or is that candied dried ground chiles??? Are the adjectives supposed to be in order?
 
"...freshly dried..."  That's the one.   :lol:  I do remember the ground peppermint candies.  
 
salsalady said:
Ground dried candied peppers on ice cream sounds like the bomb
I was thinking about this all night and morning. The possibilities are freakin' endless! Especially on BBQ! How about pancakes?! Belgian waffles?! Mixed into chocolates?! My God, I can't wait to freakin' make these.

I'm all like.....
IMG_6293.GIF


The timing of this thread is perfect too. My wife just pulled out a gallon bag of red Scotch Bonnets from the freezer in the kitchen yesterday morning, and goes "Seriously, how long are these f**king things gonna sit in here, taking up space?!"

I had no idea they were even in there :rofl:
 
When I made a batch, I used a slotted spoon to put the candied peppers in small jelly jars which left a good amount of syrup in the pan.  I saved the sweet spicy syrup for use in stir fry, would work as a simple syrup in drinks, on ice cream or pancakes....mmmmm...
 
 
A good way to serve candied peppers is with a block of cream cheese and hWheat Thin crackers.  Like that classic shrimp and cocktail sauce hors dourves, but better!
 
MikeUSMC said:
I was thinking about this all night and morning. The possibilities are freakin' endless! Especially on BBQ! How about pancakes?! Belgian waffles?! Mixed into chocolates?! My God, I can't wait to freakin' make these.

I'm all like.....
attachicon.gif
IMG_6293.GIF

The timing of this thread is perfect too. My wife just pulled out a gallon bag of red Scotch Bonnets from the freezer in the kitchen yesterday morning, and goes "Seriously, how long are these f**king things gonna sit in here, taking up space?!"

I had no idea they were even in there :rofl:
Haha. So if I got this straight you can (or cannot?) candy frozen peppers, correct?

Sent from my XT1565 using Tapatalk
 
YAMracer754 said:
Haha. So if I got this straight you can (or cannot?) candy frozen peppers, correct?
Damn..... I probably wasn't even factoring the fact that my pods were frozen into the equation, YAM. I've still never made candied pods, but I think what you're hinting at is correct; I'm pretty sure frozen pods will NOT work :mope:

Thought I'd read that somewhere. I'd have to go back to look, but I think you're right

(That big bag of Bonnets is still in my freezer too :rofl: )
 
Previously frozen can still work but you are better making pepper leather (fruit leather) with them.
 
DaQatz said:
You should be able to candy them. Be sure they are thoroughly thawed, and relatively dry. The candied peppers will also turn out slightly softer then from fresh. That is unless you're making them as a hard candy.
 
 
MikeUSMC said:
I would think "hard candy-ish" would be better to blitz them in the food processor. I've gotta get off my lazy ass and try this some time, hahaha
 

I have a post on making hard candied peppers. The soft method in the thread should be done first.
Yes you can grind them afterwards, but they get sticky fast if left exposed to air.
 
geeme did it by making the pan candied peppers, dry on parchment paper in a very low oven, dust with powdered sugar.....
 
Low Oven.jpg

 
 
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