- cross-posted to:
- food
- cooking@mander.xyz
Just the most relevant bits:
According to The Mexican Chile Pepper Cookbook by Dave DeWitt and José Marmolejo, 60 percent of jalapeños are sent to processing plants, 20 percent are smoke-dried into chipotles, and just 20 percent are sold fresh. Since big processors are the peppers’ main consumers, big processors get more sway over what the peppers taste like.
The salsa industry, Walker said, starts with a mild crop of peppers, then simply adds the heat extract necessary to reach medium and hot levels. She would know; she started her career working for a processed-food conglomerate.
“I’ve worked in peppers in my entire life,” she told me. “Jalapeños were originally prized as being a hot pepper grown in the field. When we were making hot sauce in my previous job, we had the same problem, that you couldn’t predict the heat. When you’re doing a huge run of salsa for shipment, and you want a hot label, medium label, mild label, it’s really important to predict what kind of heat you’ll get. We tried a statistical design from the fields, and it just didn’t work, because mother nature throws stressful events at you or, sometimes, does not bring stress.”
Side note: The article kinda bizarrely decides the best article to quote on the original strain of these jalapenos was a faith healing newspaper?
The "Christian Science" part of the "Christian Science Monitor" is literally a self-help faith healing movement that tells people they cant go to the doctor for anything except morphine and dentistry, and they only condone those two cause the founder had tooth problems and a morphine habit so she wrote those in as loopholes.
yeah they don't really have a strong religious opinion on peppers tho so i think its fine
they're doing it wrong in that case
Haha. I had no idea.
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I will confess to recently having watched a video going through their whole history so it jumped out to me in particular, cause they are responsible for some pretty horrific deaths of children.