You can see the pepper mash changed from a greenish color to more brownish, and even after the fermentation slowed down, all the mash was still forced up against the top of the jug:
It definitely had a sourish strong aroma, a little funky. Upon tasting the mash, two things were clear. One, that I used way too much salt (6 oz). Two, that either the Tabasco peppers or Fish peppers were VERY hot. I hoped that most of the salt was in the brine, so I strained the liquid from the mash.
That definitely helped. But the pepper mash was much too hot (and too thick) to use as straight hot sauce for "everyday" uses like on eggs or tacos. So I thawed a container of tomato puree that we had frozen from the garden. Since the tomato puree was just blended whole tomatoes that were cooked down, it was very thin and could thin out the pepper mash and cut some of the heat. I made three variations, X, XX, and XXX, increasing in heat. Most of the sauce was made as the milder X recipe which has a nice balance of flavor and slow burn heat, with just few bottles of the others. The variations:
X - 1 part pepper mash to 4 parts tomato puree, with rice vinegar and brown sugar to taste
XX- Equal parts pepper mash and tomato puree, again with rice vinegar and brown sugar
XXX- Pepper mash, with some rice vinegar and water to thin it out a bit.
For reference, the mix of varieties of peppers was:
1/2 lb Red Zavory
1/2 lb Fish
1/2 lb Tabasco
1/2 lb Jalapeno
2 lb Salsa
2 lb Poblano
1.5 lb Sweet Bell
Nicely done! I'd love to try it!
ReplyDeleteIf I remember, I'll bring a bottle for you at Alumni Weekend
ReplyDelete