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fermenting Jacob's Pepper Mash

A little late, but as promised here is a thread showing how I make my pepper mash. Aging the peppers makes an excellent sauce. Real smooth flavor and no vinegar, which I like. Never been a fan of a hot sauce where you only taste vinegar.

The bacteria needed to acidify the mash and turn it into a great sauce is naturally occuring and can be found everywhere. The key is to give it an environment to thrive before the bad bacteria and molds get a foot hold. The age old method is to add canning salt to the peppers to about 10-15% by weight cover with a layer of salt and let age. I am a little paranoid, so I use a starter to get mine going. Some people use kefir for this, but I prefir sourdough hooch. You can make this by mixing 1 cup of flour to 1 cup of distilled water and let sit for a day. Then throw half of it out and add 1/2 cup flour and 1/2 cup distilled water to the half you kept. Repeat everyday until it starts to bubble and smells sour with a beer smell to it. Then it can be kept in the fridge and "fed" once a week or so by following the same process as when you started it. Now, the hooch is the liquid that seperates from the flour/water mixture.

Here is a picture of my hooch. Notice the hooch on the top. It is dark, smells like alcohol, and full of the good stuff to get your mash going.
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Now that you have your starter, time to make the mash. I prefer to add everything together to ferment and acidify so there is no need to add vinegar later. Like I said, I prefer the taste of the peppers, not vinegar. You can add whatever you like to it to get the flavor profile you like.

The bounty I pulled from:
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So, here is the recipe I used:

By weight

6 oz Hot peppers (mixture of trinidad congo, caribbean red, marouga red, red devil's tongue, couple 7 pots, scorpions)
2 oz white onions
1 oz carrots
1 oz tomato

add to that

2 medium cloves of garlic
1 tbsp canning salt

Wash everything real good, deseed peppers if you wish (I do), and put in a blender with 1/4 cup distilled water and chop finely.

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Now it is ready to add to the container that will hold your mash. Some people use carboys with the water locks, expensive fermentation crocks, but I use regular quart canning jars. Don't worry about pressure build up in these, you don't seal them so the air will escape rather easily.

The recipe above yeilds about 1 cup of mash. I put it in the jar and add distilled water to about 1" from the top. Then add about 1 - 1 1/2 tbsps of the hooch to the jar. Place the top on the jar and give it a shake to mix the contents. I store it in a cabinet to "cook" for about 6-8 weeks. Don't forget to write the start date on the jar.

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Now on to the good stuff. Here is the mash finished fermenting and ready to finish. This was the first one trying out this recipe so it was only a half batch to see if I liked it before making a lot.
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a Ph measurement
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and after cooking down, I yeilded 2 about 2 1/2 woozies of a wonderful sauce.
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End result is a wonderfully tasting sauce that is smooth, not overpowering and goes great with about anything. A real winner. I currently have 6 jars at various stages right now and will do several more before it is done. I hope this helps anyone who is interested in trying this and thanks for looking!

jacob
 
It stopped bubbling a couple of weeks ago actually. I can boil it down and bottle it whenever, but been on 12 hours at work, plus a few other things come up so just havent got around to it yet. Only 1 bottle of sauce left, so I need to do it soon. I have 1 jar of yellow 7 mash ready to bottle I am really looking forward to tryin. Hopefully this weekend. I will post pics of the final product with the Ph reading when I bottle.

jacob
 
Oh man my one bottle of cayenne sauce is coming along nicely. I think its been fermenting for about 10+ weeks im guessing and the consistency of it looks amazing. I may cook it down anyway just a titch but it looks amazing. Who knows maybe ill use this sample to age for 3 years...lol
 
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