Try Turbo-1's Habanero Sauce - Hot Stuff!

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In summary, turbo and his wife spent the day canning and pickling various types of peppers, including habaneros, jalapenos, lipstick chilis, and a variety of red peppers. They also made a flavorful pepper relish using peppers from their neighbor and Astronuc. Their neighbor is also a pepper enthusiast and turbo's wife brought some extra jars to the store owner, who loved it and may want to start selling it. They also made jalapeno poppers, which were a hit with everyone except for the hot-averse members of the family. They also started a batch of tomato and pepper salsa to be canned the next day.
  • #351
turbo-1 said:
According to the first Amazon review, that sauce contains hot pepper extract (capsaicin) so I'm not too impressed by Dave's entry into the market. I can make sauces hotter than most mortals can stand using only my Savina/Carribean habaneros, as long as the weather cooperates and I get a decent crop. I still have a lot of green habanero chili relish jarred up, but I haven't gotten a decent crop of ripe habaneros for a couple of years due to the cold, wet summers. (Fingers crossed!) I need to make a big batch of the red relish if I can manage to get enough mature, ripe chilies.
Well, then you want this one.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000AXQA3S/?tag=pfamazon01-20
 
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  • #352
Evo said:
17 million scoville units? Ghost peppers range from 800K to a little over a million SU. So once again, Dave has resorted to adding pure capsaisin to boost the heat. I don't want pure pain. I want flavor. When I make habanero relish, I keep the recipe very simple, and balance the sweetness of molasses with the sourness of cider vinegar, so that the flavor of the chilies comes through. I love my habanero relish on hot dogs with Farmers hot beer mustard.

My wife prefers a milder blend (made with Hungarian wax, jalapeno, and habanero chilies and seasoned with dill) - still very flavorful. If you can't taste the chilies for the heat, what's the point? Just buy some pepper spray and squirt that on your food. ;-)

I've tasted some of Dave's concoctions, and I'm pretty sure I could steal most of his customers if I went commercial. He could keep the thrill-seekers. I'd take all the people who want nice balanced flavors and a range of (natural) heat. I'm not at the point where I want to build and tend a huge greenhouse and canning/bottling plant, so he's safe. Still, it's not all about the impressive SU numbers, though that's where he seems to be making his mark.

http://ushotstuff.com/Heat.Scale.htm
 
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  • #353
Evo said:

Evo, Turbo,

According to the chart I posted in post #324, here are the stats for Dave's Insanity, followed by the stuff I bought, followed by the hottest sauce.

500,000 - 750,000 Dave's Insanity Private Reserve, from Dave's Gourmet (estimated)

The stuff I bought:

1,500,000 Da' Bomb The Final Answer, from Original Juan Specialty Food

Bwahhhhh... I can only imagine what this must cost and shudder to think of even trying to taste it, my stuff leaves you hot for 10 - 15 minutes, and that is in tiny tiny doses.

16,000,000 Blair's 16 Million Reserve, from Gardner Resources, Inc.

Rhody...:devil:
 
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  • #354
Indian military to weaponize world's hottest chili
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/as_india_chili_grenades :rolleyes:
. . . .
After conducting tests, the military has decided to use the thumb-sized "bhut jolokia," or "ghost chili," to make tear gas-like hand grenades to immobilize suspects, defense officials said Tuesday.

The bhut jolokia was accepted by Guinness World Records in 2007 as the world's spiciest chili. It is grown and eaten in India's northeast for its taste, as a cure for stomach troubles and a way to fight the crippling summer heat.

It has more than 1,000,000 Scoville units, the scientific measurement of a chili's spiciness. Classic Tabasco sauce ranges from 2,500 to 5,000 Scoville units, while jalapeno peppers measure anywhere from 2,500 to 8,000.
. . . .

Just waiting for someone to classify "capsaicin" as a 'controlled substance'.

We'll get busted for trafficking hot sauces and growing hot peppers. :biggrin:
 
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  • #355
Last Christmas, I gave my neighbor an assortment of pickles, salsas, and chili relishes that I had made. He saved them until last Saturday, and laid them out for the guests at his grand-daughter's 5th birthday party. Parents of all the kids were invited, and Al cooked 'WAY too much BBQ, smoked meats, grilled sausages, etc. He placed very specific warnings on my hot sauces to prevent accidents, and they went over very well. Unless he knew that a guest had a high tolerance for heat, he told them to make up their sausage subs, hot dogs, etc, and put my sauces on the side to add to the sandwiches little-by-little until they knew just what kind of heat they were going to get into.
 
  • #356
Astronuc said:
Just waiting for someone to classify "capsaicin" as a 'controlled substance'.

We'll get busted for trafficking hot sauces and growing hot peppers. :biggrin:
I really hope my garden does well enough this year to qualify my pepper as "controlled substances". The habaneros were a disappointment last year.
 
  • #357
Astronuc said:
Indian military to weaponize world's hottest chili
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/as_india_chili_grenades :rolleyes:


Just waiting for someone to classify "capsaicin" as a 'controlled substance'.

We'll get busted for trafficking hot sauces and growing hot peppers. :biggrin:

Astronuc,

It's funny you posted this, because one of my friend's sent me the same link today, I got a chuckle :biggrin: and told him a PF member beat him to it.

After a third attempt at starting, or should I say trying to get these ghost pepper seeds started, here is what I know for sure so far.

1. The seeds germinate faster and at a higher percentage when soaked in water for a couple of days first.​
2. Do not use miracle grow Orchid potting mix to start seeds, the soil dries too fast, once dried the seeds will not germinate.​
3. Use a heat mat and an enclosed container with a clear lid and put the plastic seed starter's filled with regular (holds moisture) potting soil, I use miracle grow.​
4. Every day check the soil in the container, spray a little water on the bottom to keep moisture up and a couple sprays on top of each plastic starter cup (keep slightly damp at all times, very important).​
5. Once the plant stalks pop-up, take the top off the plastic box, and off the heat mat at night, turn the grow light off too.​
6. Be patient, they take twenty to thirty days to germinate.​
7. Three of my six seeds started, so I am observing #5 right now, and am hoping the die off fungus does not get them, or God forbid the aphids.​
8. I am going to start a second wave now, just in case they succumb to #7 above.​
9. I have seen videos of people picking these hot peppers in their homes and attempting to eat them, so I know they can be grown fully indoors.​

P.S.

The more people I speak to about these peppers the more I believe that there is a real market for these things, about 1 in 5 say they would buy them if they could get them, and that is after sampling the hot sauce, Da Bomb, the final answer which is 33% hotter than the peppers themselves. I was a bit surprised to say the least.

Rhody...
 
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  • #358
Interesting, Rhody. Maybe after I get my mini-greenhouse (new this year) running, I'll give exotics like this a try. For this season, I'll be ecstatic if I can get a good crop of habaneros. Those bad-boys can be weaponized into some killer sauces with little effort. I can process them with the windows closed, but visitors have had troubles with tearing and coughing and general distress. I'll nibble on them to see how the chilies are coming along. Nobody else has bothered (dared?) to try them.
 
  • #359
A friend just sent this: http://www.ushotstuff.com/Heat.Scale.htm"

Scroll down and watch the 8 minute video:

I learned something new watching it, brief notes below:

They make/sell Chili candy, how sick is that.

Hot chili's make the body release endorphins, resulting in a chili "high".

Checkout John (near the end of the video) with his evil contacts handing out samples of DefCon Zero (2 million scoville units, a bit hotter than Da Bomb the final answer that I have, the key to the hotness is the sauce is concentrated into an "extract".

Enjoy...

Rhody...

P.S. baby plants are doing well, growing slowly in shady sunlight and moderately dry soil, keeping the seedlings under artificial light and heat mat guarantees their early demise, :mad: go figure, keep that in mind when starting your own (FYI Turbo, Evo).
 
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  • #360
Thanks for the link, Rhody. I figured that most of the hottest contenders were made from extracts. My chili relishes are made from whole natural peppers, and are cooked down with garlic, vinegar, spices, etc. They end up being very snarly, anyway, but they preserve the natural flavors of the chilies that could be eliminated by concentrating the cap with heat and distillation.
 
  • #361
OK, don't laugh, on second thought go ahead and laugh...

The first is (left to right) about a months worth of growth of coleus and red peppers, all doing well, on the far right are the, yes, you guessed it, the ghost (bhut jolokia) peppers, that were started the same time as the other two, but because of the long germination time are only beginning to grow (and very slowly I might add). I wanted to have something for you to visualize the tremendous difference in germination and growth rate(s) of the the three plant species.

23vgsoh.jpg

These little suckers are hard enough to grow as is, so I decided, see second picture below is to turn the ghost peppers into a "bonsai ghost tree". What you see below is not a ghost pepper tree (but it is a pepper bonsai plant). This gives you some idea of what you can achieve with proper training.

Ghost peppers are perennials and should live a long time. I will have something that I can spend even more time training and watch slowly grow into a small tree. Hopefully I won't die of old age first... lol. Trees, as one would expect are the most long lived bonsai examples. See edit below: Maybe we can figure out how to create a bhut jolokia tree species in the meantime. One can only hope...

Edit: In continued reading the book I got the bonsai pepper picture from they claim that Bonsai Pepper Plants live about 10 years. If that is in fact true, then passing a Bonsai on to loved ones may not be possible. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonsai" It seems that the history is ancient almost 1000 years, in the late 1800 to early 1900's became increasingly popular, note the quote below claiming of a 500 year old example.

One of the oldest-known living bonsai trees, considered one of the National Treasures of Japan, is in the Tokyo Imperial Palace collection. A five-needle pine (Pinus pentaphylla var. negishi) known as Sandai-Shogun-No Matsu is documented as having been cared for by Tokugawa Iemitsu. The tree is considered to be at least 500 years old and was first trained as a bonsai by the year 1610.[16] Older plants have been made more recently into bonsai as well

2h4ests.jpg


Rhody... :devil:
 
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  • #362
Bonsai peppers! Why didn't I think of that? I have a sister-in-law that digs up pepper plants, puts them in big pots and over-winters them in her south windows. I may have to do her one better, and try to make some bonsai pepper plants that can be re-planted in the garden in the spring.
 
  • #363
Cool Rhody! Take care of those little seedlings!
 
  • #364
Evo said:
Cool Rhody! Take care of those little seedlings!
Evo,

I feel like an explorer in uncharted territory with these stubborn, finicky plants, I have asked around locally far and wide, and as far as I am aware except for a friend I gave some seeds to, am the only person north of the deep south, southwest, or Florida who is attempting to grow these damn things. A buddy who built this PC has some plants as well, and I may get to see them this weekend.

Second, nurturing and growing some kind of bonsai was always on my "to do" list anyway, so what better way to practice than with these hard to grow plants, sort of like some kind of sick poetic justice, at least in my own mind.

I think looking at something beautiful when you are long gone that your skill contributed to making is a really cool idea, well mine anyway. I hope to pass on some bonsai plants to special people that with a little TLC will live for another 50 to 100 years.

Rhody...
 
  • #365
My chili seeds are all planted in flats with Pro Mix and bone meal. Assuming a decent germination rate (and cooperative weather) I should have a large crop of peppers this year.
 
  • #366
turbo-1 said:
My chili seeds are all planted in flats with Pro Mix and bone meal. Assuming a decent germination rate (and cooperative weather) I should have a large crop of peppers this year.

turbo,

http://www.organicconsumers.org/madcow/fertilizer1804.cfm"

I tend to err on the side of caution, and I realize bone meal is in some fertilizers, having said that, the proteins in Mad Cow disease have been proven to not be destroyed when boiled or even burned was what led me to stop using the stuff a number of years ago.

The risk of getting http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creutzfeldt%E2%80%93Jakob_disease" is pretty low and I am told only after multiple exposures to the prion or protein in it can you get Mad Cow disease. For that reason I tend to stay away from it. At the very least if you spread it (bone meal) around in dust form you may want to consider using a mask to keep from inhaling it.

Rhody...
 
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  • #367
Thanks, Rhody. I'm not too worried, though. I trowel it into dampened potting mix so dust is minimized. With my respiratory problems, I tend to avoid fine dusts of all kinds.

I use bone meal because tomatoes and peppers need phosphorus for good rooting, and it does not raise the nitrogen level like some organic fertilizers. Nitrogen promotes bushy growth in both peppers and tomatoes, but can suppress flowering and fruiting. I use rotted manure in the garden because it releases nitrogen very slowly and steadily, and the plants never get a real "kick" like they can with organic fertilizer mixes.
 
  • #368
I just ordered some of these: tricolor ornamental peppers, will look cool planted around the house all summer, may use some as gifts:

I would have ordered these back in February but the were not available: http://gurneys.com/product.asp?pn=73606&bhcd2=1272316176" in case anyone else wants to order.

54bwvm.jpg


Rhody...
 
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  • #369
They sell those in the floral department here. They're very pretty.
 
  • #370
They are probably good to eat, though I wouldn't eat any purchased from a flower place. No telling what kind of treatments that they have experienced for fungus, nematodes, etc. I'll have to see if Johnny's or FedCo has untreated seeds so I can start my own.
 
  • #372
My last batch of ghost peppers germinated in exactly 8 days, (temperature in the box: 80 - 85 F checked with some thermometer) I used wet paper towels (that's the secret to keep the seeds from drying out), inside a germination plastic container with a clear top, and put warm water on the seeds, started in peat disks, made a big difference, the batch before I did not use a heat mat and they took almost twenty days to germinate, those plants now upstairs have double in size since last weekend and have more leaves. About 3 days after starting them I added more water and made sure the peat pots were still damp, good thing is to check them every day or two because if they dry out the seeds will die or simply not germinate.

As soon as the heads popped up in the current batch, I took the clear top off and turned on my grow light, and they took off on their own, so I am starting (finally) to get the hang of growing these things, next up is the multicolor ornamental peppers, I will start a half dozen of those, the seeds are tiny compared to the ghost peppers and the package suggests about the same germination rates as the ghost peppers.

I transplant them into Miracle Grow orchid potting mix and thy seem to like it, the top of the soil dries out quickly which they like and the water retention on what is left is pretty good, only water them about every 2 to 3 days. When I fertilize, (not until they get bigger, I will use only organic fertilizer, again Miracle Grow, I don't want to use too much too soon.

Rhody... :biggrin:
 
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  • #373
I'm using the "lazy way" starting my peppers in large multi-compartment flats. I've got them on the top shelf of my greenhouse, and though yesterday and today have been cold and dark, they are starting to sprout. Hungarians first, then I expect the jalapenos to pop, and last, the habaneros.
 
  • #374
Remember how tiny those Bhut Jolokia peppers looked here, https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=2682722&postcount=361" far right.

Two months later they look like this:

They grow low and spread out, the ones to the left and front of the big pot are more ghost peppers, the ones in the rear, are habanero, and the ones in the pot to the left are the three color ornamental s I just started. They all like the Miracle Grow Orchid Potting Mix, and like it somewhat dry, especially on the surface.

Rule of thumb to start, use a heat mat, enclosed container with paper towels soaked in water, and use those peat seed starter things, put seed just below the surface and rough up the peat and barely cover, check about 5 days for water, add more if necessary, in every case they all germinated in 8 days, the fastest possible time, internal temp of the plastic starter case: 80 - 85 degrees F.


4kiss6.jpg


and this

2poplj6.jpg


Rhody...
 
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  • #375
Wow! Good luck with them. I'd love to play a bit with them, but it's too cold here.
 
  • #376
They look great Rhody, not spindly, bright healthy color.
 
  • #377
Safe from almost any catastrophe! Although if it keeps getting hotter, I might have luck with ghost peppers here.

http://csce.gov/index.cfm?FuseAction=ContentRecords.ViewDetail&ContentRecord_id=923&ContentRecordType=P&ContentType=P&CFID=36414073&CFTOKEN=90499712
 
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  • #378
Evo Child introduced me to a hot sauce imported from Mexico, Cholula. Not hot enough for manly men like turbo & Astronuc, but it's a bit hotter than Frank's Original (which just won best tasting mild hot sauce, it *is* my favorite).

Cholula has a distinctly different flavor, it is made from arbol and piquin peppers. It also has a cool wooden cap.

http://www.cholula.com/
 

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  • #379
Last night I opened my very last jar of habanero relish. I really need this year's chili crop to come through for me, or next winter will be a sad time. I'm making a double-batch of my hot grilled jumbo shrimp for a cookout we're having at our neighbors' place tonight, and habanero relish is a critical ingredient of the marinade/glaze. No other form of heat compares - even my best jalapeno relish can't do the job.
 
  • #380
turbo, have you tried any of the hot garlics? I just saw a show that had Korean Red (hot) garlic. It sounds perfectly suited for your climate. Al Roker said it's really fiery hot and delicious.

Korean Red is a generally a vigorous grower with large foliage that is dark green and results in a pretty good sized bulb. Being a Rocambole garlic, its flavor is very strong, hot and spicy and sticks around for a long time. From a growers perspective, it grows well in cold winter areas, but does poorly in warm winter areas, and usually grows healthy fairly uniform sized bulbs. It has thin bulb wrappers that have a lot of purple and brown in them.

I have a hard time deciding which hot garlic should be ranked where, but Korean Red Hot is certainly up there and I will just have to continue eating as many different ones as I can in an effort to improve. When I die, don't bother to bury me, just plant in the fall and water me, I'll probably sprout and grow.

Korean Red Hot usually has anywhere from 8 or 9 easy to peel cloves that are of good size, with no smaller inner cloves. The outer bulb wrappers are thin and flake off easily so it is not a very good storer, but no Rocambole is - through the fall and into winter. Great taste is their claim to fame, not long storage. For those up North who want to grow their own garlic it only takes a year or two to grow all you can eat. It harvests in early summer along with most of the other Rocamboles. Bulbs are usually over 2 1/2 inches in diameter and are of good size are grown primarily for their particularly rich flavor.

http://www.gourmetgarlicgardens.com/rocamboles.htm
 
  • #381
My friend gave me some hot sauce that made me think I might die. I stuck one tine of a fork into it and put it on my tongue and I was miserable for about 10 minutes. I felt nauseous afterward.
 
  • #382
No, I haven't tried Korean garlic, in large part because I'm saving my garden space for the English and Russian hard-neck varieties that store well all winter in my cold cellar. Since you get a single bulb per plant, garlic takes up a lot of space in the garden compared to other vegetables. For instance, one 35-foot row of buttercup squash will keep us in squash all winter long, assuming we get a decent season. To get enough garlic for our needs, reserve enough of the biggest ones for the winter planting, and to give some to family (saves them money at the grocer's) I have to plant 3 35-foot beds hoed up about 2 feet wide.
 
  • #383
I might order some to see if they're as good as everyone says.
 
  • #384
Evo said:
I might order some to see if they're as good as everyone says.
I like pungent garlic, so I'll have my wife keep an eye out for some at farmers' markets or produce departments.

Wal-Mart is building their store into a super Wal-Mart with groceries and produce, so the local Hannaford supermarket is beefing up its offerings in a bid to keep customers, including some ethnic foods and produce. Hannaford is a big chain up here, but Wal-Mart is country-wide with deep pockets. I imagine their grand opening will feature tones of loss-leaders just to get new customers in the door.
 
  • #385
I agree!:biggrin: ...Oh wait...we're talking about peppers? Oh...:cool:
 

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