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Post by songbirdPost by f***@sdf.orgPost by songbirdi'll be interested to find out which pepper(s) you find
to be bitter.
a bit of a delayed reply here. :)
a bit. :)
changing jobs is stressful. had three in the last year. finding work is
easy, finding good employers with good management to work for is nearly
impossible these days. i'm getting too old for this shit but life is
back to normal again. :)
Post by songbirdPost by f***@sdf.orgturned out none of the peppers are bitter, when used in reasonable
quantity. it was using way too much pepper which caused the bitterness.
:) glad you've figured it out.
through my experimentation i acquired a taste for the heavy flavor. my
family says thanks but no thanks. fine! more for me. :)
Post by songbirdPost by f***@sdf.orgi eventually roasted and ground the peppers in a coffee grinder one type
at a time. turns out i was adding the equivalent of about 2.5 cups of
ground chili pepper to six quart batches of chili. that's enough to make
anyone pucker up is my guess.
haha! some versions of New Mexican chili i have use no
other ingredients beyond ground up chilis, garlic, water,
flour and fried chunked beef or pork. it's excellent but
if you are used to Tex-Mex style chili with tomatoes and
beans to cut the chili it's quite intense - often i've
heard people call it red sauce, but to me it's just chili
and it's yummy used in many ways. it would be nice to
have some on hand all the time but i'd be the only person
here eating it so i just use various jars of hot sauce
instead.
this i am going to do, get down to the basics. fairly soon when the
weather drives me indoors, too.
Post by songbirdfor normal people i think a cup would be plenty, i'd
probably like double that. i don't like certain kinds of
hot chili peppers so there is that too. like for sure i
would not want 2 cups of habanero chili powder or ghost
pepper powders - both of those i can avoid as i don't
want or need that kind of heat.
in the past month i've been enjoying some Beaver Dam
peppers which are about the same heat level as jalapenos
but are close to green or red peppers in flavor but with
a thinner walled pepper and a different shape than the
bell peppers. they grow longer and more pointy - most
that i have been harvesting are about 10 inches (about
15cm) long and about 8cm across. i've used them in all
sorts of things and will also eat them fresh. removing
the seeds and veins calms them down some.
the chili peppers i'm using for chili are mild. i have mason jars with
dehydrated peppers i grew in the garden. scotch bonnets. habaneros.
reapers. ghosts. i love the flavor of the scotch bonnets and need to
grow more. when i'm making chili only i am going to eat i'll use the
equivalent of two to three habaneros or scotch bonnets. i don't much
like the flavor of reapers and ghosts but they sure do bring the boom
when it's wanted. i won't need to grow more of them for several more
years.
burpee sells "big guy" hybrid jalapeno seeds. they grow very well for me.
most get used for grilled poppers stuffed with romano cheese mixed with
chopped up veins and wrapped with bacon. rest get sliced, flash frozen,
and bagged for use in whatever, mostly salads.
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