I once toasted some dried Canenne and Chili de Arbol pods in my oven - used low heat (~250) and kept a close eye on them so they didn't burn (a couple did anway). I then used these in a Jalapeno sauce.
The house smelled great and the I thought it changed the flavor of the pods a little bit but I wasn't sure if it really translated to the sauce as much as I was hoping. seemed like on their own they tasted a little different, but when stewed/boiled and blended I didn't think it materially altered the sauce as much as I'd hoped.
Has anyone here used toasted, dried chili pods in sauce-making, and have you noticed a dramatic impact to the flavor of the sauce as a result? Was there a special technique you used?
Just curious, thanks.
The house smelled great and the I thought it changed the flavor of the pods a little bit but I wasn't sure if it really translated to the sauce as much as I was hoping. seemed like on their own they tasted a little different, but when stewed/boiled and blended I didn't think it materially altered the sauce as much as I'd hoped.
Has anyone here used toasted, dried chili pods in sauce-making, and have you noticed a dramatic impact to the flavor of the sauce as a result? Was there a special technique you used?
Just curious, thanks.