I had pulled all the seasoning pepper plants into the garage, and just stripped them and cut them back. I normally just slice the seasoning peppers up and freeze them to use in everything from my morning omelet to a side dish of sautéed peppers with dinner. I'd been planning for a while to try coming up with a mild pepper sauce for my wife and people like her who don't like anything remotely hot, so faced with several pounds of extra seasoning peppers I decided to have a go at one.
I had an assortment of Yellow Aji Dulce, Trinidad Perfume and Grenada seasoning yellow peppers, so I decided to start with those, and leave the red seasoning assortment for another day. After poking around the pantry and fruit basket, I came up with this list of ingredients
2 ½ pounds of the above Caribbean seasoning pepper medley
Juice and zest of 1 orange
zest of 2 limes
Juice of 4 limes
2 medium mangos
2 small sweet potatoes
2 cups cane vinegar
Chopped the peppers, mangos and sweet potatoes and everything went in the stock pot, along with 1 cup of Angostura rum. Yes a little went in the cook. After it had simmered a bit, I ran it through the blender, and back in the pot, cooked some more, then blended and strained to get it smoother and remove the seeds.
The pepper character was there, nice texture but it was missing something. I was listening to Jimmy Buffett and we were talking about going to Miami for his show in January when I imagined that some coconut cream would give it a little pina colada like character, so I decided we'll do something other than the Thai I had planned for dinner and added a can of coconut cream to the sauce.
Right now it's setting to let the flavors meld a bit before I make any final adjustments, boil and bottle it. I'm not completely happy with it, but I don't know if it's just because it's such a mild sauce. I can pull out all the flavors I was expecting, there is some acidity to it and I will test the PH and adjust that if needed and I believe it does need some salt. I was thinking of sneaking just a couple of yellow 7-pots in to give it a touch of heat, but that will defeat the purpose, which was to get something that everyone other than me could have on chicken or fish.
Anyone else tried making a pepper sauce for people who think Tabasco is too hot? Opinions on what you would do differently?
I had an assortment of Yellow Aji Dulce, Trinidad Perfume and Grenada seasoning yellow peppers, so I decided to start with those, and leave the red seasoning assortment for another day. After poking around the pantry and fruit basket, I came up with this list of ingredients
2 ½ pounds of the above Caribbean seasoning pepper medley
Juice and zest of 1 orange
zest of 2 limes
Juice of 4 limes
2 medium mangos
2 small sweet potatoes
2 cups cane vinegar
Chopped the peppers, mangos and sweet potatoes and everything went in the stock pot, along with 1 cup of Angostura rum. Yes a little went in the cook. After it had simmered a bit, I ran it through the blender, and back in the pot, cooked some more, then blended and strained to get it smoother and remove the seeds.
The pepper character was there, nice texture but it was missing something. I was listening to Jimmy Buffett and we were talking about going to Miami for his show in January when I imagined that some coconut cream would give it a little pina colada like character, so I decided we'll do something other than the Thai I had planned for dinner and added a can of coconut cream to the sauce.
Right now it's setting to let the flavors meld a bit before I make any final adjustments, boil and bottle it. I'm not completely happy with it, but I don't know if it's just because it's such a mild sauce. I can pull out all the flavors I was expecting, there is some acidity to it and I will test the PH and adjust that if needed and I believe it does need some salt. I was thinking of sneaking just a couple of yellow 7-pots in to give it a touch of heat, but that will defeat the purpose, which was to get something that everyone other than me could have on chicken or fish.
Anyone else tried making a pepper sauce for people who think Tabasco is too hot? Opinions on what you would do differently?