My typical method of preservation of hot peppers so far has been freezing. However, I have messed around a bit with drying and powdering; I've powdered Tabasco, Habanero, and my "Mystery" pepper from last year. By the way, in case anyone cares, I posted about the mystery pepper on the forums last year:
http://www.thehotpepper.com/topic/17120-mystery-pepper-anyone-know-what-this-is/
...and while I didn't get any responses as to exactly what it was, I found a pepper just recently on ChilePlants.com (where I got the mystery plant) that looks very similar, if not the same... the Peruvian Serlano:
http://tinyurl.com/peruvian-serlano
Anyway... I have found that unripe tabasco peppers make AWESOME powder, and orange habaneros make some pretty good powder (but seemingly retain more heat than flavor, at least in my cheap food dehydrator). The mystery one, though, I think I'd rather use it fresh, it seems to have such a nice fruity flavor that seems to be utterly destroyed by drying.
So, that leads to the question: what are your favorite peppers for drying to make powders? I've personally noticed that smaller peppers (ie. tabasco) are kind of pointles to slice up and cook fresh into food, since their heat is not evenly distributed, but they are amazing as powders to use on pizza, bacon, breakfast sausage, and lots of other things. But what others excel at this use?
http://www.thehotpepper.com/topic/17120-mystery-pepper-anyone-know-what-this-is/
...and while I didn't get any responses as to exactly what it was, I found a pepper just recently on ChilePlants.com (where I got the mystery plant) that looks very similar, if not the same... the Peruvian Serlano:
http://tinyurl.com/peruvian-serlano
Anyway... I have found that unripe tabasco peppers make AWESOME powder, and orange habaneros make some pretty good powder (but seemingly retain more heat than flavor, at least in my cheap food dehydrator). The mystery one, though, I think I'd rather use it fresh, it seems to have such a nice fruity flavor that seems to be utterly destroyed by drying.
So, that leads to the question: what are your favorite peppers for drying to make powders? I've personally noticed that smaller peppers (ie. tabasco) are kind of pointles to slice up and cook fresh into food, since their heat is not evenly distributed, but they are amazing as powders to use on pizza, bacon, breakfast sausage, and lots of other things. But what others excel at this use?