Hi everyone!
I''ve just made my first ever fermented hot sauce... or rather, three. A scotch bonnet, carrot, and garlic sauce. A smaller batch of the same but with 400% more garlic. And another batch that has the same ratio of peppers, carrots and garlic but with some added spices, some foraged berries, and an orange. Everything is going great (touch wood)... I washed, steralized, and sanitized like I was in an operating theatre, which has meant that there are no signs of mould*, not even Kahm yeast, and the ferments are smelling great... at least as far as I can tell without opening the jars. Now it's almost time to process and bottle the sauce.
With the first variety of sauce, as I made a much larger batch, I plan to no pasteurize some of it, and to keep it in the fridge in a Ball mason jar, with the lid ever so slightly loose. Owing to limited fridge space and the intent of gifting some of the sauce to family and friends (and not wanting it to decorate their respective ceilings when they open it), I plan to heat treat the rest of the sauce. But I'm not decided on the best method, so I'd appreciate any advice you're willing to share.
1. If I boil the woozy's and hot fill and invert them... what's the best way of handling the hot bottles? All the kitchen tongs I have would make it risky, so I'm thinking of getting some heat proof, waterproof gloves but I'm worried that that might introduce issues with keeping the bottles sterile.
2. Could I sterilise with a bleach solution, rinse, then fill the bottles, and then water process them? I can't really find trustworthy, clear documentation on this technique.
3. I don't quite understand the rules regarding sweetening the sauce, especially the batch that I plan on not pasteurising. Can I just add sugar to a "completed" fermentation as long as the PH is lower enough?
*my larger batch does have some orange particles floating around the rim of the brine but I'm almost certain that they're just very small particles of carrot as the ferment still smells great, I can't find any mould or yeast that looks like them, and they haven't increased in number or size since they first appeared a few days into the fermentation (which was started on 2023-11-25).
I''ve just made my first ever fermented hot sauce... or rather, three. A scotch bonnet, carrot, and garlic sauce. A smaller batch of the same but with 400% more garlic. And another batch that has the same ratio of peppers, carrots and garlic but with some added spices, some foraged berries, and an orange. Everything is going great (touch wood)... I washed, steralized, and sanitized like I was in an operating theatre, which has meant that there are no signs of mould*, not even Kahm yeast, and the ferments are smelling great... at least as far as I can tell without opening the jars. Now it's almost time to process and bottle the sauce.
With the first variety of sauce, as I made a much larger batch, I plan to no pasteurize some of it, and to keep it in the fridge in a Ball mason jar, with the lid ever so slightly loose. Owing to limited fridge space and the intent of gifting some of the sauce to family and friends (and not wanting it to decorate their respective ceilings when they open it), I plan to heat treat the rest of the sauce. But I'm not decided on the best method, so I'd appreciate any advice you're willing to share.
1. If I boil the woozy's and hot fill and invert them... what's the best way of handling the hot bottles? All the kitchen tongs I have would make it risky, so I'm thinking of getting some heat proof, waterproof gloves but I'm worried that that might introduce issues with keeping the bottles sterile.
2. Could I sterilise with a bleach solution, rinse, then fill the bottles, and then water process them? I can't really find trustworthy, clear documentation on this technique.
3. I don't quite understand the rules regarding sweetening the sauce, especially the batch that I plan on not pasteurising. Can I just add sugar to a "completed" fermentation as long as the PH is lower enough?
*my larger batch does have some orange particles floating around the rim of the brine but I'm almost certain that they're just very small particles of carrot as the ferment still smells great, I can't find any mould or yeast that looks like them, and they haven't increased in number or size since they first appeared a few days into the fermentation (which was started on 2023-11-25).