Planted and Enchanted

A casual blog about sustainability, gardening and life in Central Texas


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Too Spicy for You

Making hot sauce is fun. Fermenting it in the process is an adventure.

Finely chopping peppers and adding a bit of sea salt ferments them in their own delicious juices, giving subtle flavors and an unbelievable kick. Lacto-fermentation is a popular way of making hot sauce and is implemented by many brands like Tabasco and Sriracha.

I used one-pound of fiery habaneros and three-pounds of a Serrano/jalapeño mix for this batch. The peppers were finely chopped in a food processor with just over an ounce of sea salt, then pressed in to a sanitary 1/2 gallon Ball jar with an airlock on top for four weeks. It required scooping harmless, white mold off the top few layers and re-pressing the peppers to cover in their own brine every few days, but was essentially easy. The end result is incredibly spicy and certainly not for the faint of heart. Next time around I’ll use a significant amount of bell or mild hatch peppers to help bring out sweetness and round out the flavor. This sauce is good, but the entire pound of habaneros is overpowering and tilts the flavor a little too far.

Serrano Habaneros

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Recipe adapted from RLM Provisions

4 lbs fermented hot pepper mash

3/4 head garlic, peeled

1 3/4 cup distilled white vinegar

1 1/2 cup raw apple cider vinegar

Bring all ingredients to a boil over medium-high heat in a large saucepan. Reduce to simmer for 5-10 minutes. Purée ingredients in food processor or blender and strain with a fine-mesh strainer in to bottles.

 

Hot Sauce!


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Fourteen Years in Austin

This weekend marked our 14th anniversary of moving to Austin and it was a good one.

We started off at the always pleasurable Jester King brewery and Stanley’s Farmhouse Pizza. Always fun to try their top-notch farmhouse ales. Plus, Stanley’s had Prairie Ales’ Standard on tap, which is ridiculously tasty.

Aurelian Lure

Our lacto-fermentation projects seem to be multiplying. This weekend we used two-pounds of Serrano peppers from the garden to start a batch of mash and three-pounds of carrots and four ounces ginger to make slaw. We’re fascinated by the natural fermentation that takes place with the addition of just a bit of sea salt and plan on expanding our lacto-ferment-based line soon.

serrano fermentcarrot

Sunday ended by brewing our first-ever black IPA, which was a blast. It was the first time using Carafa 2 malt, which was super dark and roasty. Good times. We also employed a new hopping method that had us waiting until 15 minutes left in the boil to add the first round. A second round of Centennial and Simcoe was also added at flameout, and we’ll dry hop with them both at secondary.

no regrets

Hope y’all are having fun doing things and making stuff. Send us pics of your own homesteading projects. We’d love to see what you’re doing.


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Habanero Jelly

If you’ve never tried habanero jelly, you’re in for a treat. The unique flavor and burn of the pepper gets balanced by plenty of sugar, resulting in an incredibly addictive sweet heat. Fantastic on goat cheese, sour dough, ice cream, tortilla chips and just about everything else we’ve tried. Adapted from the great folks at My Pantry Chef at Food52.

giffer (3)

You’ll need:
8-9 orange habaneros, preferably from your backyard or farmers market

2 sweet peppers–orange bell and red Italian sweet peppers work well

4 1/2 cups of organic white sugar

3 T pectin

1 t butter

Clean and sterilized canning jars, lids and rings

Boiling water bath

See the full method at Food52 

 


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Caribbean Red Habanero!

Planted early June, photo 6/17/09

Planted early June, photo 6/17/09

I grew a few of these incredibly HOT peppers last year, beginning in August. Even with that late start the plants produced wonderful fruit and I had more capsaicin in my kitchen than most folks encounter their entire lives. I put this baby in the ground June 5th using  a compost rich, well-draining, soil…I’m expecting good things.

June 5, 2009

June 5, 2009

At the moment the plant is about 18″ and already has some peppers coming in. You can see the little green pepper, which should start turning red at about 80 days, in the middle of this photo.

Here’s a photo of a few of the Caribbean Red Habaneros I harvested from the garden last fall. These were picked on December 10th, 2008 and made my tongue burn.

Harvested 12/10/08

Harvested 12/10/08

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