Sounds ideal for using some of my Hab glut - just one question, what is 'Kosher salt' ? Kath. -----Original Message----- From: Suzanne [mailto:suz@avana.net] Sent: Saturday, August 22, 1998 1:36 PM To: Chile-Heads@globalgarden.com Subject: [CH] Here it is - Tabasco recipe I had enough requests that it seemed prudent just to repost this. >Date: Wed, 22 Oct 1997 15:30:25 -0400 >From: Ed Johnson <ejohnso1@maine.rr.com> >To: "Chile-Heads@globalgarden.com" <Chile-Heads@globalgarden.com> >Subject: [CH] Here it is - Tabasco recipe >Sender: owner-chile-heads@globalgarden.com >Reply-To: Ed Johnson <ejohnso1@maine.rr.com> > >Hi, everybody. Carey Starzinger was kind enough to respond to my request >for his Tabasco recipe within an hour of my requesting it! Thanks, >Carey. > >=Forwarded from <stars@sisna.com> > >----------------------------------------------------------------------- ---- ---------- > >Hi Ed, > And away we go. I have included how I do it as well as the >original >McilHenny method. This should be a big hit. I have had the >fermentation >start very early in the aging stage, but I have also had a delay of up >to 6 >months before it started. I assume it is due to temperature >differences. I >just set it on a shelf with the fermentation lock on and checked it >every >once in a while. > > Hope you and all the members enjoy it. I know that I certainly >do >and it is worth the effort even though it may take a year or more. > >Carey > >--------------------------------------------------------------------- > >The Original McIlheny method (1800's) > >Grind peppers. Add 1/2 cup kosher salt per gallon of ground peppers >and allow to age 1 month in glass or crockery jars. Add white wine >vinegar to taste and bottle in cologne bottles. Age before using to >blend the flavors together. Try to find somebody to buy it. Get >famous. >--------------------------------------------------------------------- >Nowadays they do it the same, except that the salted mash goes >directly into oak barrels. The mash is packed down and the top sealed >with oak planks into which holes have been drilled. Avery Island >(trivia: the "island"`is really a natural salt dome; originally all >salt used in production came from natural salt digs in the area. ), >where some of the peppers are grown, is the production site. The >barrels are topped with a thick layer of salt and allowed to ferment. >The salt layer serves as a permeable barrier that allows gases to >escape but allows no bacteria, fruit flies, etc. access to the mash. >McIlhenny allows them to age three years in these oak barrels. After >aging, the mash is pulled, checked for quality and, if OK, it is >blended with white wine vinegar (they don't say how much) and aged >some weeks more ('nother secret!). Finally, the product is pulled, >strained and the liquid bottled. They already have buyers and the >stuff *is* famous. > >The US version has potassium sorbate added to inhibit fermentation. >Same >method except the peppers are aged not fermented. > >Adapting this to your home: > >Note: as you must pull the liquid from the peppers, they must be >fresh, fleshy and of the right state of ripeness. At Avery Island they >still use the original "critique baton rouge", a red stick tinted to >the exact color of the peppers to be harvested. Peppers not matching >the "critique" are rejected. Old or overdried peppers are the key to >failure. One trick for garden peppers is picking them as they are just >at the right stage (I've been doing this with habanero peppers for >weeks), then popping them into freezer bags until you have enough to >make a batch of sauce. > >The ratio of mash to salt seems to be about the same as for >sauerkraut. Grind peppers, seeds and all, in a medium to fine grind >(compare To KitchenAid cutters). Mix with Kosher salt and put into >gallon jug. Add enough sterile water so the whole puree is pourable. >Place a >fermentation lock (available from homebrew/wine making shops) on the >jug. >Use a campden tablet (from same source as above) in the lock. Liquid >will >form. Allow to ferment until the mash stabilizes (stops fermenting). It >may >be 3-5 months before obvious fermentation begins. It is a very slow >ferment. >It will last a couple of months. Place the whole thing in a larger, >sterile >crock and add sterile white wine vinegar to taste. Allow to meld another > >week or so. Run the mash through a chinoise, fine strainer, or, last >resort, >throw it all into a bowl lined with cheesecloth, fold the cheesecloth up > >into a ball (like making cottage cheese) and twist & squeeze until the >juice is extracted. Adjust for >taste with salt. Bottle the juice and keep in fridge. You might want >to heat the sauce to pasteurize it, or not. I use potassium sorbate >(available from the same homebrew/wine making shop) in the concentration >for >wine. > >If there is a question as to whether the material has fermented, if the >liquid that forms on top (with the pepper slurry settled out) is very >red, >then fermentation has occurred. Otherwise the liquid on top will be >very >pale and almost colorless. (i.e. not red) > >Variables: Age of peppers. Variety. Water content. Consistency of >ripeness. > >Hope this helps. Win or lose, it's a lot of fun. The key is : Keep all >your stuff clean and sanitized! Enjoy the effort! Amaze and astound >your friends with *your own* hot pepper sauce. If it doesn't beat >Tabasco, sweat it not. It took him a couple of years to perfect it. > > > > > > > >