(Pictured: my first round of lacto-fermented pickles from 2021)
What are you doing differently this year? What do you want to learn?
Last year I got some inspiration from a HB post about pickling cucumbers and it was a really enriching and fascinating journey to learn about pickling and fermenting.
This year I want to stay on that train but learn to ferment habañeros, but my other goals are a gourd arch (for the pickling cucumbers), going to try drying beans for the first time in 10 years (I found a place to harvest bamboo that I'm going to use to make some huge trellises), and I want to try celery and also do garlic, potatoes, sweet peppers and eggplant.
I also want to learn about saving seeds, but I say that every year.
So what about you comrade? Share your inspirations!.
Wow thank you!
Here's the paste recipe I use. It's very similar. It calls for a ton of peppers but I've never had a problem scaling it waaaaay down.
Pepper Paste
yield: about 1 quart (fermentation vessel: 1 quart)
In addition to its visual appeal and the taste, the beauty of this paste is its simplicity. We make a gallon of it every year. If the fam- ily ate this freely, it would never last, but we save it in small jars and dole it out. The bonus: It gets better over time. You can easily scale up this recipe to make a gallon-size batch. Use whatever type of chile you have. Our favorite is the fire-engine red Fresno, in part because its color is so appealing. It's similar to a jalapeño but is usually hotter.
Ingredients: 1/2 pounds chiles, stemmed 2 teaspoons unrefined sea salt
Put the chiles, seeds and all, in a food proces-sor and pulse until coarsely chopped. Remove the food processor blade and stir in the salt.
Press the mixture into a crock or jar (see the note below). For a crock, add a primary follower: food-grade plastic screening (see page 36), like that used in a dehydrator, cut to size, works best to keep the small bits under the brine; otherwise, top the ferment with a quart-sized ziplock bag. Press the plastic down onto the top of the fer-ment, then fill it with water and seal; this will act as both follower and weight.
Set aside on a baking sheet to ferment, somewhere nearby, out of direct sunlight, and cool, for 21 days or more. Check the chiles occasionally to make sure your weights are in place and the chiles are submerged. It is nor- mal to encounter yeasts; you can leave them undisturbed. The chiles take at least 3 weeks to develop a flavorful acidity, then 3 to 6 months more for a delicious and complex flavor.
Store in an airtight jar in the refrigerator, where this paste will keep for 2 years or more.
Note: For a long-term ferment, use a water-seal crock (see page 34) to help control the growth of yeast.
VARIATION: Hot Sauce To make a Tabasco-style hot sauce, strain the paste through cheesecloth to remove some of the brine.
Splash a bit of raw apple cider vinegar into the brine and voilà! — hot sauce. The brine mixture makes a tangy flavoring to add to anything from refried beans to guacamole.
Return the paste to the jar, tamp it down to keep it moist, cover with a small sheet of plastic, and screw on the lid.
:sankara-salute: thank you comrade, I will star this post and get back to you in six months
You're very welcome, enjoy!