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I'm looking forward to tasting some of turbo's habanero sauce.
You'll taste it soon enough! It's pretty easy to make, since my wife decided to further simplify the recipe.Astronuc said:I'm looking forward to tasting some of turbo's habanero sauce.
turbo-1 said:Today, I picked cucumbers and peppers, and my wife and I chopped, canned and pickled all day (still not entirely done with the pickling). We combined habaneros, jalapenos, lipstick chilis, and a nice assortment of red peppers that Astronuc brought up with 3 large bulbs of German garlic that our neighbor gave us to make a really flavorful pepper sauce. Actually, it's not a sauce in the sense that things are pureed and watered down - it's more like a very hot, tasty relish.
I need feedback on the mild peppers, so I can avoid them in the future.Some of Astonuc's peppers are very flavorful, but mild, and some are very zippy, and the end result with our flavorful jalapenos and the sneaky-hot habaneros is a pepper relish that is to die for. My wife had to run back to town for some additional Mason jars, and she took in some "overage" (too much to fit in another jar, not enough to justify canning another jar) to the owner of the store. From his reaction, we may have to consider franchising this stuff. He has asked for more (for personal consumption) and we may have to start charging him if we can't establish an equitable barter system (we do need Mason jars, as many of them do not find their way back home when we give give canned goods away) or else charge him and keep increasing the price until he squeaks. You can't buy stuff like this in any store, and he and our garlic-growing neighbor are pepper-heads.
as opposed to the medical use meaning "softening of the organ or tissue".This week's theme: miscellaneous words.
malacia (mu-LA-shuh, -shee-uh) noun
1. An abnormal craving for spiced food.
I got the impression that Maine folks are generally genuinely nice. The motorists actually stop for pedestrians - even if there is no crosswalk!Up here, we take care of each other. I can't leave Maine.
I've got an uninhabited township all picked out for you - as long as I can come up and fly-fish the ponds there.Astronuc said:I noticed that there is plenty of extra room up that way.
Meanwhile, I've been enjoying Turbo's Green Sweet Jalapeno Jelly and a Turbo's Green Hot Pepper Relish - Deeeeelicious!Evo said:We'll meet half way, you hand over the salsas and we'll hand over the chocolates.
Ask her to make up a batch with green tomatoes. It compares very favorably to salsa made with tomatillos, and it is abolutely KILLER on cheeseburgers, quesadillas, omelets, etc.scorpa said:Turbo homemade salsa is the absolute best! My mom is busy making her salsa now to and I cannot wait to be on the receiving end of a few jars. Store bought salsa just doesn't even compare. I must say though I have never had green tomato salsa but it sounds good!
We make very spicy tomato-based salsas with jalapeno, habanero and lipstick chilies, but our chili relishes are hotter and the very hottest stuff is the habanero relish. There is some in the little jars in this picture, though those batches were made with store-bought habaneros because we ran out of the home-grown stuff that we canned last season. We're not going to make that mistake this year, and intend to make many more batches as the chilies ripen off. If the frosts come, we'll process the green hapaneros, too, but want to get as many mature ones as possible. Note: This is just one cupboard of pickles and salsas - we've got a bigger one with more food in it, and we've got a big batch of red-tomato salsa simmering on the stove right now. Some of those jars will have to go into the pantry, along with any other hot stuff we make. We not only ran out of habanero relish this year, we ran out of green tomato salsa, too. I swear that's not going to happen again!Math Jeans said:Hey Turbo, I am a huge fan of spicy foods. Whats ur spiciest salsa?
We use it IN pasta sauce, not as a sauce in itself. I love meat, onions, green peppers, garlic, etc in a simmered-down sauce of our home-grown tomatoes, and we use the habanero/jalapeno relishes quite liberally to heat up the sauce. If you get habaneros like ours (Carribean Reds) they are off the chart in heat compared to jalapeno, but the jalapeno peppers have such a nice flavor that I like to use them in spaghetti sauce, too. In fact one of my favorite chili relishes is a mix of equal parts jalapeno, habanero, and lipstick chilis. The lipsticks are very decorative and colorful and they grow with the fruits pointing up. My sister-in-law wants to adopt one or two of those plants before hard frost and grow them in a container in her house.Math Jeans said:mmmm. Sounds great. I wonder if it can work as pasta sauce .
turbo-1 said:We use it IN pasta sauce, not as a sauce in itself. I love meat, onions, green peppers, garlic, etc in a simmered-down sauce of our home-grown tomatoes, and we use the habanero/jalapeno relishes quite liberally to heat up the sauce. If you get habaneros like ours (Carribean Reds) they are off the chart in heat compared to jalapeno, but the jalapeno peppers have such a nice flavor that I like to use them in spaghetti sauce, too. In fact one of my favorite chili relishes is a mix of equal parts jalapeno, habanero, and lipstick chilis. The lipsticks are very decorative and colorful and they grow with the fruits pointing up. My sister-in-law wants to adopt one or two of those plants before hard frost and grow them in a container in her house.
It really depends how much heat you can tolerate. With our hot home-grown habaneros, I doubt that you'd dip it like salsa. At least not more than once.Math Jeans said:Can the habanero relish be used as straight up salsa with chips?