Mostly to know what my options are. I have acquired a few dried peppers that I bought with the intention of trying to get the seeds to germinate - Carolina reapers (scary!), chiltepins, Sichuan Facing Heaven peppers, Calabrian Diavolitto Rossi - plus I have had a lot of Mexican dried peppers just sitting around forever. The latter seeds haven't germinated yet but the reapers, the chiltepins, and the Calabrians are gong nuts. Every Calabrian seed I put in the cup germinated and sprouted - 100%. Amazing! About 40% of the reapers sprouted. I have high hopes for the Facing Heaven peppers. Having harvested seeds, I still have the peppers and would like to know if I can put them in , for instance, pikliz, one of my favorite condiments, or salsas. Carolina reaper pikliz? Yikes!Yea, theoretically....
I would think the resulting product would be....not great.
When fruit or veg are rehydrated, they are pretty limp. They could be pickled, but the result would not be anything like pickled things using fresh produce.
Any specific reason for considering this?
This is awesome news. I'll experiment. One jar full of assorted dried peppers and brine coming right up.Yes you can. And you can even skip the step of "rehydrate then pickle." The brine will rehydrate them! I use dried peppers in my pickles for heat but also end up eating the peppers.
Of course!Having harvested seeds, I still have the peppers and would like to know if I can put them in , for instance, pikliz, one of my favorite condiments, or salsas. Carolina reaper pikliz? Yikes!
Very cool, thanks for the info.These are sun-dried and put into vinegar.
Sun Dried Peppers
Sun dried peppers are a great addition to meats, cheeses and toasts and a sweet addition to salads, sandwiches, dips, pizzas, flatbreads and various pastas.www.delallo.com
Make sure to keep it refrigerated if not already, since you are introducing something new to the mix.