I see people online making fermented habanero or scotch bonnet sauce, but is there any tradition of fermenting these peppers?
We have Louisiana style fermented sauces that have been around for over 100 years using frutescens or annum peppers. In the Caribbean, chinense peppers tend to be used fresh or in simple fresh sauces.
At the grocery, we have El Yucateco, Melinda’s, and a few other established habanero or scotch bonnet sauces. Are any of these common sauces fermented?
If chinense peppers benefit from fermentation, why is there no tradition of doing so? Why haven’t fermented chinense sauces started filling the grocery aisle?
On the contrary, if these peppers are better without fermentation, why are so many online pepper enthusiasts fermenting their chinense sauces?
We have Louisiana style fermented sauces that have been around for over 100 years using frutescens or annum peppers. In the Caribbean, chinense peppers tend to be used fresh or in simple fresh sauces.
At the grocery, we have El Yucateco, Melinda’s, and a few other established habanero or scotch bonnet sauces. Are any of these common sauces fermented?
If chinense peppers benefit from fermentation, why is there no tradition of doing so? Why haven’t fermented chinense sauces started filling the grocery aisle?
On the contrary, if these peppers are better without fermentation, why are so many online pepper enthusiasts fermenting their chinense sauces?
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