Thursday, July 20, 2006

Peppers!

Hello there.
So you might have seen yesterday's Kansas City Star. Perhaps you are a subscriber, even. Possibly you were perusing the food section and just happened to stumble upon the back page where you saw, um...me. Me and my Beaver Dam bachelor farmer Great-Great Uncle Louie's recipe for really tasty pickled peppers.
First of all, I have to thank my friend Tate, who likes the peppers and likes me and thought that I should be in the paper. Thanks, Tate!
And secondly, a special thanks to those of you who are visiting this little blog - I am so very glad to have you. Maybe this would be a good opportunity to say that I am here, doing this, because I thought there was a little hole that I could fill. Because I read food blogs, lots of them. Because I think Kansas City is a food-bloggable town. Because I've been blogging since 2001 and since giving up my personal blog, I wanted to write about something just as personal - food.
And now, I'm hereby giving up the word "blog." Sorry about that. That word could seriously use some synonyms.
Just in case you didn't see it, here is the pepper recipe. Lately, I've been pickling big jars of Hot Banana Peppers almost exclusively (see photo) - they're the ones coming out of my Mom's garden, and they're incredible. Feel free to pickle whatever peppers you like best. And don't forget to wash your hands, or just wear gloves. Pepper juice hurts.

Uncle Louie's Peppers
Makes 6 pints

6 cups vinegar
1  1/2 cups water
1  1/2 cups sugar (or more, to taste)
1 tablespoon salt
6 cloves garlic, peeled (or more, to taste)
1 bunch curly parsley, separated into sprigs
6 tablespoons olive oil
3 pounds jalapeno peppers, washed and sliced into thick rounds (see note)
Anchovy fillets (optional)

Combine vinegar, water, sugar and salt in nonreactive pan to make brine. Bring to a full boil and continue boiling 3 minutes, or until sugar is dissolved. Remove from heat and let cool 5 minutes.

Sterilize 6 pint canning jars, lids and rings. In the bottom of each sterilized jar, place 1 (or more) cloves garlic, a sprig of parsley and 1 tablespoon olive oil. Pack full with pepper slices until almost overflowing and top with a single anchovy, if desired. Pour hot brine into jars to fill them to the rim. (The peppers will reduce in bulk and compress in the hot brine.) Immediately seal with sterile lids and rings.

When jars are cool to the touch, place in refrigerator and let cure at least a week. Peppers are crisper with shorter curing periods. Jars must be stored in the refrigerator. Unopened jars may be refrigerated up to 6 months; opened jars 2 to 3 months.

Variation: For milder mixture, substitute 1 pound banana peppers for 1 pound of the jalapenos.

Note: Wear rubber gloves while slicing peppers. Also wear gloves to protect hands against heat of jars while sealing.

3 comments:

the unthinking lemming said...

I'm pickling some jalapeno peppers. Its all the same. Great blog.

Sara said...

Hey! There you are in the newspaper!

Sara said...

Yay me!
My fifteen minutes of fame were, at the least, grimace-inducing.