I have a PBR hand warmer.. Kind of an odd thing for a beer company to make right? HmmAshen said:We won't tell them it is actually PBR that you rinsed your growlers with.
I have a PBR hand warmer.. Kind of an odd thing for a beer company to make right? HmmAshen said:We won't tell them it is actually PBR that you rinsed your growlers with.
Yes, that would be malt vinegar, just add the thick stuff on the bottom to the beer thats done. People do that with a bottle of wine too.Ashen said:Hey dragonsfire, would you know if mother could turn beer into vinegar?
The boss could make a mint selling OH beer vinegar to the hipster lineup outside Other half.
Shorerider said:He talks of disliking vegetable fillers like carrots and tomatoes, yet does it himself. But what gets me is the fact one of his ingredients is water? I'd much rather someone add carrots and tomatoes to a sauce over water which has no flavor whatsoever.
Ive never heard of carrots or tomatos being used solely as fillers. They add sweetness without having to use a lot of sugar. Ive had some very good sauces that have carrots as well.Codeman said:I agree I make my own hot sauce with actual spices added and no carrot or tomato as filler as well. Tastes better than store brand.
There are tons of companys that put some of those ingredients in there sauces that are considered top tier companies.Scorch Garden said:I make sauces, but before that, i ate sauces. I still do, but it's hard to find something i can get behind.
Frank's Red Hot was my go to in the 80s, i had outgrown Tabasco in my early teens and until the 90s there wasn't much of a hot sauce market so choices were limited.
Now that i am experienced in gardening and cooking (not just sauce but in commercial kitchens), my pallet has changed.
I pretty much write off any sauces that have:
I consider them basic and impure.
- extracts
- thickeners
- sugar
- preservatives
- colorings
- a filler vegetable like tomatoes or carrots as the second ingredient
- a $5 or less price tag
My other issue is since i've been into super hots since 2015, nothing is as hot as it claims to be on the bottle. That's my fault, but still, when something says XXX HOT and the hottest pepper that is listed is habanero...WTF???
Maybe i'm the odd man out here, which i'm fine with, but does anyone else share my views?
Thats ALOT of heat man! LolThe Hot Pepper said:
Also you know second ingredient does not always mean filler or even second most in some cases...
You would pass on this:
Vinegar, Carrots, Ghost Peppers, Scorpion Peppers, Reaper Peppers
But let's say this is the percentages:
Vinegar (25%) Carrots (23%) Ghost Peppers (20%) Scorpion Peppers (19%) Reaper Peppers (13%)
That's 100% and in order of the amounts.
Look what you have there.
52% Peppers, 25% Vinegar, 23% Carrots.
It's last!
salsalady said:not sure if we have met, I haven't been to any festivals/events back east. Been to some events in Tx, NM, Cali, OR,
`SL, Jim was able to travel to shows because of his full time job (Note t shirt in below.), maybe you remember him?Hab_Nut said:Then maybe you know Jim Campbell, who owned the Mild to Wild company.
Hab_Nut said:Then maybe you know Jim Campbell, who owned the Mild to Wild company. He's the one who opened his pepper field for gleaning back in 1998. That has turned into a big campout event, which survives even after the pepper field is no more.
*Jim Neighbors voice* BACK HOME AGAIN IN INDIANA, O'ER THE FIELDS I USED TO ROAM...
I have purchased many pounds of dried peppers and chipotle powder from Jim, starting around year 2000. Talked to him several times on the phone and online, but never had the pleasure of meeting him in person. M2W was at the shows I attended (2011-ISH?) but I think Jim had sold the biz or at least had others working the events. Jim is an icon in the chile world. Great guy.The_NorthEast_ChileMan said:`
`SL, Jim was able to travel to shows because of his full time job (Note t shirt in below.), maybe you remember him?
He's the non-smoker on the right...
`
I loved their purees myself. They illustrate salsalady's often made point about how it doesn't really matter how high the scoville rating of the pepper in a sauce is but thd percentage. If I recall correctly both the fatalli puree and jolokia 10 were rated about the same heatlevel but the fatalli always seemed to have more bite after bite build and lasting hang time.Hab_Nut said:I loved the CaJohn's line of pepper purees - just one variety of pepper, vinegar and IIRC a bit of salt. Pure pepper flavor, kind of like a single-malt whisky vs. a blend.
But, CaJohn sold the company and I don't know if those purees are still being made. The labels were plastic, so for fun I trimmed one and stuck it on myself for a pic of a habanero transdernal patch.
habanero_transdermal.jpg
Scorch Garden said:I make sauces, but before that, i ate sauces. I still do, but it's hard to find something i can get behind.
Frank's Red Hot was my go to in the 80s, i had outgrown Tabasco in my early teens and until the 90s there wasn't much of a hot sauce market so choices were limited.
Now that i am experienced in gardening and cooking (not just sauce but in commercial kitchens), my pallet has changed.
I pretty much write off any sauces that have:
I consider them basic and impure.
- extracts
- thickeners
- sugar
- preservatives
- colorings
- a filler vegetable like tomatoes or carrots as the second ingredient
- a $5 or less price tag
My other issue is since i've been into super hots since 2015, nothing is as hot as it claims to be on the bottle. That's my fault, but still, when something says XXX HOT and the hottest pepper that is listed is habanero...WTF???
Maybe i'm the odd man out here, which i'm fine with, but does anyone else share my views?