+1, it might not be true Chipotle but a lot of people do really like mine.JoynersHotPeppers said:I have my own spin on making my knock off of them but man fully ripe is the only way to go...so sweet and nice heat.
Yeah that would be why mine would be special...hard to get and copy pepper ingredientThe Hot Pepper said:He makes commercial sauces.
Thanks for the info! its very interesting to read about the meco and morita. I will buy both to have a reference and compare with what we produce.The Hot Pepper said:Honestly you'd be better to source chipoltes for sauce unless you know how to make them. It's not just smoking. They are smoke-dried for several days over select woods like pecan, and there are morita and meco chipotles, the meco are prized as the best. They are held the longest on the vine for flavor and are larger.
If you just want to smoke the peppers, then go for it. It won't be a chipotle. But this sauce rocks the smoked green jalapeno:
http://www.consumingfires.com/
Sounds fantastic!! I have tried smoking peppers with whiskey barrel slats it seemed to produce a slightly bitter taste. I usually smoke peppers with a mild wood like pecan with a mix of cherry for color this produces a fantastic smoke flavor profile without being bitter.Damn! said:Good, from what I read I will not have real chipotle, thats ok to me, I mostly want a smokey flavor for my BBQ and want to do it all buy myself. I will try to find red jalapenos because yes they taste better and I guess the sweeter taste will fit better on BBQ sauce.
The sauce will be with beer form a local microbrewery and the pepper smoke with wood from whisky barrel that serve to age the beer!
Thanks for the info! its very interesting to read about the meco and morita. I will buy both to have a reference and compare with what we produce.
Wrong. Jalapeno is the varetiy. Is it smoke-dried into a chipotle in Mexico.RudyGonzalez said:You all aware that Chipotle is a mexican pepper variety right?
Chipotle salsa isn't really smoked jalapeños or any other smoked pepper, its just salsa made with Chipotle chiles that happen to taste smoky when dried.
I caught your edit after I posted but you are still wrong. If it is not smoke-dried, it is not a chipotle, so you can't say "chipotles already taste smokey" because they don't exist unless you smoke them. The pepper variety is jalapeno. If you dry it but not smoke it, it is a dried jalapeno. Chipotle is not a variety that grows.RudyGonzalez said:I'm pretty sure there is a smoking process like Hot Pepper said but dried chipotles already taste smoky as well as morita, ancho, negro, guajillo peppers which are other pepper varieties used mainly as a condiments due to its low level of heat and smoky flavors.
Sorry, you are wrong.RudyGonzalez said:The Hot Pepper, Chipotle IS a variety all on it own. You can plant it and grow it and it will never look, taste or smell anything near a jalapeño smoked or not. Please take a look at the description of this Herdez Chipotle Salsa and then the ingredients on the bottom and tell me I'm wrong again: http://www.herdeztraditions.com/products/traditional-salsa/herdez-salsa-chipotle/