This is a timely thread for me, as I just got a bag full of fresh japs and habeneros from my mom's garden. Methinks I can't resist the deep fried cheese concoction.
This is a timely thread for me, as I just got a bag full of fresh japs and habeneros from my mom's garden. Methinks I can't resist the deep fried cheese concoction.
vwcorvette wrote: Obviously that should read HOME grown!
Is fixed now. That was an unfortunate typo.
Cut the tops off the peppers, gut the seeds; put in a cube of sharp cheese, a bit of prosuitte or cabrigole and drizzle it with olive oil. Let it sit in the fridge for a few hours to get all that happy working, then just pop 'em
DanPoppers. You're welcome.
914Driver wrote: ...a bit of prosuitte or cabrigole...
Maybe it was the typo getting to me, but I totally read that as "prostitute" the first time around.
Glad I could make your day via the typo. Damn, I'm usually pretty good about that stuff too.
Thanks for all the input. Gonna do a variety of things. Dehydrate for sure. Poppers. And get some viegar and stick some peppers in there as well.
Any more ideas?
pilotbraden wrote: I had 3 grocery sacks of habenero peppers that I dried in a food dehydrator. I sliced them in 1/2 and placed them on the racks before leaving for work. When I opened the door after work I had the sensation of being pepper sprayed. All future dryings took place on the back porch or in a shed. I then used a mortar and pestle to grind them into powder. The yield was about 1 1/2 quarts. That was in 1995. I still have some of it at my cabin. It is wicked hot and delicious. A teaspoon of it in a 2-3 gallon batch of beans or chili will light it up nicely.
I have the same stuff - a coworker makes it every summer. It's good on almost everything.
16vCorey wrote:914Driver wrote: ...a bit of prosuitte or cabrigole...Maybe it was the typo getting to me, but I totally read that as "prostitute" the first time around.
Prostitue I can spell, it's the smoked Italian pig and hot peppered ham that throws me.
914Driver wrote:friedgreencorrado wrote: 914driver, have you got better links than I, or did you just learn it at grandma's knee?Read a book once, everything from there is trial & error. I make a kickazz Veggie Soup in the late summer or fall and freeze it in manageable chunks. Once I tried to can some so you can just open a can instead of waiting for it to defrost. EVERY ONE blew up! It stunk like rotted fermented baby puke/sour milk/dead mouse. Oy. Someone told me later that you can't can zuccini. If you hear anything on this or just canning soup in general, please let me know. Thanx, Dan![]()
Canning veggies can be tough because some of them have very low acid content. Those have to be heated in a pressure cooker to get the temps high enough to kill the bacteria (240deg F/116dec C). My mom always knows when it's harvest time, because I'm on the phone every three days, "Mom? Yeah, should I pressure can (vegetable X)?" Unfortunately, we didn't get a garden this year-SWMBO's new job's overnight shift & it's rough on her. And everything I touch seems to die..
EDIT: Here's a link with a fair description of pressure canning.
http://www.offthegridnews.com/2011/05/02/canning-202-low-acid-vegetables/
Some folks use those fancy pressure canners, but you can use a regular pressure cooker. Takes all day because you can only do about two jars at a time, though.
EDIT #2: Botulism spores, not bacteria. My brain's broken today.
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