How I Dry Hot Peppers
We have a food dehydrator. Even still more often than not I find air-drying to be the better way to go. Its slow, steady, and silent. Plus, I enjoy the pretty strings of peppers hanging about the kitchen. The bundles of herbs smell and look so lovely as they hang from the rod in the sewing room.
I thread a needle on a doubled over a piece of thread and knot the end. I pierce the needle through the green stems atop the peppers and slide them down to the knot. If I don't have enough to fill out the string I just leave the needle on and hang the line, as is, until I have enough to complete it.
When the string is completely full I leave a long enough tail to snip the needle off and tie a knot on the now-cut ends of the thread. That leaves me with a loop I use to hang the string of peppers from hooks--the sort most people have houseplants hanging from--in our kitchen. I pull off the dried peppers as needed throughout the winter and spring. Its very handy as well as attractive.
Our friend, Mary, gave us quite a nice bundle of hot peppers to add variety to our cayennes and jalapenos. I ate a Tabasco pepper raw at her house. I got the hiccups immediately. Oooooh, it was intense. I really should add more variety to the hot peppers we grow though. They seem to add a depth and novelty to the flavor of the salsas and sauces we've made so far. The tomatillo salsa in particular was much better than last year's.
We've had a great crop of peppers this year. With a forecast for some more extended autumn heat we could have the best yet.
With so many peppers to play with I am also trying my hand at picking peppers for the first time. I'm told pickled peppers make for great hot sauce. I love hot sauce. Its where most of these strings of dried peppers will end up, actually. So, I am totally up for trying another method of preservation that leads to a new hot sauce recipe. Sounds good to me!
I thread a needle on a doubled over a piece of thread and knot the end. I pierce the needle through the green stems atop the peppers and slide them down to the knot. If I don't have enough to fill out the string I just leave the needle on and hang the line, as is, until I have enough to complete it.
When the string is completely full I leave a long enough tail to snip the needle off and tie a knot on the now-cut ends of the thread. That leaves me with a loop I use to hang the string of peppers from hooks--the sort most people have houseplants hanging from--in our kitchen. I pull off the dried peppers as needed throughout the winter and spring. Its very handy as well as attractive.
Our friend, Mary, gave us quite a nice bundle of hot peppers to add variety to our cayennes and jalapenos. I ate a Tabasco pepper raw at her house. I got the hiccups immediately. Oooooh, it was intense. I really should add more variety to the hot peppers we grow though. They seem to add a depth and novelty to the flavor of the salsas and sauces we've made so far. The tomatillo salsa in particular was much better than last year's.
We've had a great crop of peppers this year. With a forecast for some more extended autumn heat we could have the best yet.
With so many peppers to play with I am also trying my hand at picking peppers for the first time. I'm told pickled peppers make for great hot sauce. I love hot sauce. Its where most of these strings of dried peppers will end up, actually. So, I am totally up for trying another method of preservation that leads to a new hot sauce recipe. Sounds good to me!
well, lovely. I think I will get a hot pepper plant next year. Your method of drying them suits my style!
ReplyDeleteTotally. I like it low-tech.
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