No seriously, not to toot my own horn because 1. that sounds disturbing and 2. I'm not a boastful guy, but this stuff is nasty (the 'good' nasty) good. This is the fourth year making it and the recipe has changed slightly every year. If you have tried it before or if you make some for yourself let me know what worked well or tasted good if you made any changes. It can only get better.
DEAR AMATEUR CANNERS - WEAR GLOVES WHEN HANDLING HABANERO PEPPERS!
Seriously, ask Curt - and he only had a bad experience with banana peppers. You can exit unscathed dealing with the occasional jalapeƱo or less spicy pepper but not with habaneros - they will ruin your day, hell, they'll ruin a few days.
I use a 1/2 peck of cleaned and halved habaneros for this recipe. If you're unfamiliar with harvest measurements see the picture below:
This shows from left to right; pint, quart, peck, bushel.
A 1/2 peck of peppers will yield approximately 2 quarts (when putting the peppers into a liquid 2 quart measuring cup) when cut and cleaned.
Here's the recipe:
Habanero Hot Sauce
1/2 peck seeded and halved peppers
1 lb. Carrots - chopped
2 Stalks Celery - chopped
1 medium sweet onion - diced
5 cloves of garlic - diced
1 Quart white vinegar
1 Cup white sugar
1 Tablespoon canning salt
2 Tablespoons Pickling spice - you can use store bought or make your own.
1/2 Tablespoon honey
Fresh carrots from the garden. |
Place the vinegar, carrots, celery, onion, and garlic into a large sauce pot and cook on medium heat until the vegetables are fork tender.
Using a hand blender or free standing blender - blend the mixture until it is very smooth and free of any chunks.
Return the mix to the heat and add the sugar, salt, and honey. Place the pickling spiced into a spice bag or wrap them in cheesecloth so that they can be easily removed - then also add that to the mixture.
Continue to cook the mixture on medium heat for an additional 30 minutes. This is a good time to clean and prepare the peppers.
Working in batches, mix the raw peppers with a ladle of the heated mixture and blend until very smooth. Once the peppers have been successfully blended with the rest of the mixture remove the pot from the heat.
The best part about this recipe is that it retains the good taste of the habaneros without being overly spicy. I mean, it's spicy, but enjoyable spicy. Not cooking the peppers allows for this. The longer the peppers cook the more they will lose their flavor. So if the taste is as important as the heat - cook the peppers as little as possible.
At this point you need to decide on the desired level of consistency for the sauce. I like mine to be 'spoonable' so I leave it as is and ladle it into hot jars. If you prefer a thinner sauce (similar to store bought hot sauces), you are going to want to cook the mixture for another 20 minutes then run the mixture through a fine mesh strainer or jelly bag, and then add water to reach your desired level.
Once ladled into hot jars process the jars in a boiling water bath for 20 minutes.
The color is slightly off this year because we grew a different variety of Habaneros - they are called Mustard Habaneros. They are larger and have thinner walls compared to the normal peppers and they ripen to an almost yellowish-green color instead of the normal orange.
Keep it real effin' hot pepper heads.