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Correcting Metal Taste in my Hot Sauce. Anyone?

I need some help on a sauce. This thing I made while having an initial good flavor comes off with something the best I can compare it to is a metal taste. It has a quart of fermented chinense chilies mash, 2 lg. red onions, 3 limes, 2 globes of garlic, 2 cups of apple cider vinegar, 2 tbl. of sea salt and I put 3 tbls. of molasses in it to try to tone down the metal taste. Any suggestions?
 
dunno~  :confused: 
 
I have old food mills from thrift stores that are tinned and will rust if not properly cleaned and immediately dried.  Others I know of have SS mills, with different plates, etc.  It should be pretty clear if yours is prone to rust or if SS. 
 
Those with more smarts than me (or willing to do a quick google... :lol:) might be able to add further info if the mill is magnetic or not, if that is any indication.  :shrug:
 
 
 
hot stuff said:
My wife said it could also be the stainless steel pot. But I thought SS would be safe.
tctenten said:
I agree with you here. I have made many sauces in SS saucepan and not hat the metallic taste.
  
salsalady said:
should not be the SS.  As you said, that's why SS is used-because it is non-reactive.  But just to rule out everything else, were there any other metal appliances used like an aluminum food mill? 
That would've been my first guess too.

"What type of pot did you cook it in?"

But you used stainless. I'm stumped...

Best of luck though! Hopefully you (or someone else) can figure it out
 
I love that we're all "What did you cook it in?" as a first guess.  SS won't impart that flavor, and the OXO food mill is also stainless.  
 
Last year I had a batch with a similar metallic taste at the end, made w similar ingredients; fermented yellow supers, onion, garlic, pineapple, rice wine vinegar, clover honey.  Tasted great up front, tasted like sucking on pennies at the finish.
 
Tried to add more vinegar/honey to help soften that finish but wasn't ever completely satisfied with the sauce and ended up throwing the whole batch out before bottling.
 
 
 
SmokenFire said:
I love that we're all "What did you cook it in?" as a first guess.  SS won't impart that flavor, and the OXO food mill is also stainless.  
 
Last year I had a batch with a similar metallic taste at the end, made w similar ingredients; fermented yellow supers, onion, garlic, pineapple, rice wine vinegar, clover honey.  Tasted great up front, tasted like sucking on pennies at the finish.
 
Tried to add more vinegar/honey to help soften that finish but wasn't ever completely satisfied with the sauce and ended up throwing the whole batch out before bottling.
 
 
 
 
Isn't that kind of a rite of passage for sauce makers....to pitch a batch cuz it's not right?  been there...done that....more than once... :lol: ... Live, learn, make another batch~  
 
 
When trying to develop a sauce, I've pitched 3-4 test batches before getting remotely close to the flavor profile I'm looking for, and then from there, it's a bunch more batches to dial it in.  But that's different than tossing some peppers and ingredients in a pot to see what happens.  I didn't see anything in the original ingredients to raise a red flag, other than some hot peppers have that metallic aftertaste. 
 
I'm not sure about metallic taste but I used to get batches that had a strange off-taste sometimes, and sometimes not  even though I used the same recipe.
I noticed when I cut my peppers in half to freeze or ferment I would get an occasional pod with dark brown almost rotten seeds even though the pod looked and felt fine.
Since then I always cut open my pods and toss the bad ones and haven't had a bad tasting batch since. Well relatively speaking of course, some of my experiments are still major fails that need to get tossed anyways but it's from clashing flavors not off-type flavors.
 
On the note about lemon or lime juice, I've heard it's better to add after the cooking but can't confirm it.
 
Hawaiianero said:
I noticed when I cut my peppers in half to freeze or ferment I would get an occasional pod with dark brown almost rotten seeds even though the pod looked and felt fine.
Since then I always cut open my pods and toss the bad ones and haven't had a bad tasting batch since.
YES! Even when processing literally hundreds of pounds of superhots, i cut every pod open.
 
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