Hi I am Mexican!! The orange peppers are Habanero, the Jalapeño peppers are smaller and thinner, we eat them green. The Habanero peppers are hottest and they come in different colours: red, green, orange and yellow. Anyway thanks for the recipe!! God bless you!!
🤣 🟧 jalapeno yeah I heard him say it in the vid and was like that's a jalapeno man I'm sure he realized this after the video and he's like ah I'm too lazy to edited out and change it
oh i like the smoked salt idea! i have a little pack of some i bought and it's TOO smoky to use as a finishing salt and have been wondering what to do with it.
I know I’m late to the party on this, but the foam in the after product will continue to form because the product is still fermenting and the thickened product no longer allows for those bubbles to escape as freely. To stop this, raise the temperature of the hot sauce to around 200° for 30 seconds or so, let it cool, then bottle it. This will stop post-bottled fermentation
Lovin' this series E! Your description of lacto fermentation is the clearest and easiest to follow I have seen. And thanks for the tip on the fermentation lids.
John G Thanks for the feedback on the Lacto information, I’ve been trying to take a simplistic but still informational approach. Those fermentation lids are great, makes the whole process worry free.
You don’t know what brand Crystal sauce is?? That’s like holding a Snickers bar in your hand and saying ”I don’t know what brand the Snickers bar is.” Crystal sauce is the finest Louisiana hot sauce in terms of flavor. There are others that have more heat, even than Extra Hot Crystal sauce, but Crystal simply has the best hot pepper flavor.
Most places in the US have chlorinated tap water which can inhibit fermentation. I let water I'll be using for a ferment sit, still overnight to let the choline evaporate out. I actually keep a jar of dechlorinated water around so I can top up ferments without needing to wait.
What is the shelf life of these types of homemade sauces? Side note, freeze the leftover mash into blocks and use it to boost up a chili verde or a green enchilada sauce.
I just bottled my fermented sauce. I’ll let it sit for a few days then a taste off with the roasted and fresh varieties. I used Hatch, Poblano, and Jalapeños in mine.
Great video, got me started trying to duplicate a poblano sauce I used to get in the '70s. Haven't got there yet but great fun and good stuff gettin there.
Smokes all your peppers, remove membrain as it creates a bitter taste and use a sugar/water brine, garlic, spoonfull of whole black pepper corn, 1 onion, 3 month ferment then grind up everything and do not strain, add more brine during blending to thin to your liking. I make a ghost pepper sauce like this and have months back orders on it lol
This is a GREAT series! I'm a new subscriber and looking forward to seeing your channel grow. It deserves a much larger audience! I'm currently making a couple of fermented hot sauces for the first time and I'm excited to see how they turn out. Did you test the acidity before bottling? From what I've read, you want something below 4.6 pH to preserve it (one of the sites you link recommends below 4.0). If you refrigerate or consume quickly then it's probably alright, though. Also, are you concerned the fermentation will continue in the bottles (even when stored in the fridge) and cause an explosion?
I appreciate it! Glad to hear you are making some of your own hot sauces. To answer, you questions: 1. I do not ph test my hot sauces. You certainly can, but between the salty environment and acidic environment in the hot sauce I'm confident in keeping out any bad bacteria. 2. Once you put the hot sauce in the fridge, it severely slows down the fermentation, I haven't had any gas build up once I bottled it and put them in the fridge. Plus I'm using them a lot so any build up is let off. I would just monitor them if you are keeping them outside the fridge and keep the cap a little loose to let off any gases. Hope that helps!
there's another offshoot to take. I remember when I was a kid we got some chutney as a gift and it was GREAT! Haven't found any as good in 30 years. Maybe have to make some when I've perfected poblano sauce to my liking...?
I'm glad you specified new floors, what you did is how I got a 3 inch long piece of wood in my foot when I was 13 on some worn hardwood. Gonna try this hot sauce out! Love the vids man.
I've followed the exact same recipe, albeit with yellow bell peppers instead of poblanos. I've stored it in the fridge for 3 days now, but I haven't seen any foam or bubbles or anything that might show it's fermenting. Do you have any tips? Or should I keep it out of the fridge? I've also used kitchen salt. Don't know if that makes a difference.
Keep it out of the fridge. Lactofermentation works better at temperatures between 70-80 F. It severely slows down or almost becomes nonexistent in cold temperatures like the fridge.
@@EthanChlebowski Thanks for your quick reply! I've let it out of the fridge for 8 days and it came out great! Added just a little thickened mango juice, cumin, allspice and ginger to make it a Jamaican mango habanero variant. Thank you so much for your video!
So I know you're the expert here, but are you sure those are jalapenos? They look like a habanero of some sort. Thin walls, the wrinkles, the color, etc.
hofmeyer88 To each their own. That’s why I said bare minimum of 7 days, but feel free to go longer. Well aware haha, I left a text blurb where I accidentally called them jalapeños.
Great video, I found it on reddit. You've got another subscriber. If I could give you a small bit of constructive criticism it'd be that while mostly the production values on the video are great there's a slightly jarring audio difference between when you're speaking to camera vs. when you're doing a voiceover, the voiceover is much louder, (at 2:23 for example) maybe take the volume down a little bit on your voiceovers in future videos? Everything else is great, you do a great job of explaining everything and I'm really looking forward to the rest of the series! I love hot sauce but never even considered making my own before.
Hey Vincent, glad to have you here. Thanks for the feedback on the audio. For the voiceover, I do it in a different room and get closer to the mic so it sounds a little better than the echoey room. I try to normalize the audio levels, but it could use some work, so thanks for letting me know! Glad you are enjoying the hot sauce series, you definitely have to experiment with making some!
You should consider adding a humor element to your videos. You're already half way there with the, "I'm not even sure what brand this "Crystal" hot sauce is, the Jalapeno-Habaneros, and calling fruits vegetables (Chile's are fruits) and that was only 3 minutes in. I know you weren't trying to be funny but I think you could do really informative videos, With corrections printed in the background, and be very entertaining. I would watch that.
Guy doesnt know the difference between a jalepeno and a Habenero and he is teaching people how to make hot sauce which if done wrong can actually kill you.. take a look at botulism and whilst you're at it find someone who knows what they're on about for fermented chilli sauce recipes. 👍🏽
Hi I am Mexican!!
The orange peppers are Habanero, the Jalapeño peppers are smaller and thinner, we eat them green. The Habanero peppers are hottest and they come in different colours: red, green, orange and yellow.
Anyway thanks for the recipe!!
God bless you!!
I was gonna say if you didn't know they weren't habaneros, you would know when you tasted them, lol.
Nice vid. Orange Jalapeños mentioned in the beginning turned out to be habaneros at the end :)
Yeah, he kept saying jalapenos and I'm thinking they're habaneros.
Literally the reason I came to the comments. Jalapeños and habañeros are NOT interchangeable lol
No doubt! If you treat habaneros like jalapeños, your going to have a bad time! (Informative video otherwise, tho. Thanks!)
🤣 🟧 jalapeno
yeah I heard him say it in the vid and was like that's a jalapeno man
I'm sure he realized this after the video and he's like ah I'm too lazy to edited out and change it
He put the correction on the video "*habaneros" in the top left corner.
Mmmm. I love jalabeneros
I love fermented hot sauce. I use a combo of Fresno and a little bell pepper with garlic and smoked salt. Delicious! Great video as always!
oh i like the smoked salt idea! i have a little pack of some i bought and it's TOO smoky to use as a finishing salt and have been wondering what to do with it.
I love all the variations you can add. Smoked salt is a great idea!
Good video. Factual, to the point, not wasting time trying to ham it up much at all. So many videos add superfluous stuff off the subject. Nice job!
I know I’m late to the party on this, but the foam in the after product will continue to form because the product is still fermenting and the thickened product no longer allows for those bubbles to escape as freely. To stop this, raise the temperature of the hot sauce to around 200° for 30 seconds or so, let it cool, then bottle it. This will stop post-bottled fermentation
Lovin' this series E! Your description of lacto fermentation is the clearest and easiest to follow I have seen. And thanks for the tip on the fermentation lids.
John G Thanks for the feedback on the Lacto information, I’ve been trying to take a simplistic but still informational approach. Those fermentation lids are great, makes the whole process worry free.
i dried my sriracha solids and then ground it up to make a powder for chips and popcorn, etc
Did this man just hold up a bottle of Crystal hot sauce and say "I dont even know what brand this is?"
You don’t know what brand Crystal sauce is?? That’s like holding a Snickers bar in your hand and saying ”I don’t know what brand the Snickers bar is.”
Crystal sauce is the finest Louisiana hot sauce in terms of flavor. There are others that have more heat, even than Extra Hot Crystal sauce, but Crystal simply has the best hot pepper flavor.
Most places in the US have chlorinated tap water which can inhibit fermentation. I let water I'll be using for a ferment sit, still overnight to let the choline evaporate out. I actually keep a jar of dechlorinated water around so I can top up ferments without needing to wait.
What is the shelf life of these types of homemade sauces? Side note, freeze the leftover mash into blocks and use it to boost up a chili verde or a green enchilada sauce.
‘Don’t know what brand this is’ holding a bottle of the G.O.A.T hot sauce Crystal is bonkers ha
I just bottled my fermented sauce. I’ll let it sit for a few days then a taste off with the roasted and fresh varieties. I used Hatch, Poblano, and Jalapeños in mine.
Great video, got me started trying to duplicate a poblano sauce I used to get in the '70s. Haven't got there yet but great fun and good stuff gettin there.
Smokes all your peppers, remove membrain as it creates a bitter taste and use a sugar/water brine, garlic, spoonfull of whole black pepper corn, 1 onion, 3 month ferment then grind up everything and do not strain, add more brine during blending to thin to your liking. I make a ghost pepper sauce like this and have months back orders on it lol
You’re blowing up!! Gunna be giving other food channels a run for their money soon..
What a prediction
periodt
Use the dried paste like seaweed wrap with rice and shrimp ...mmmmmm 👍
Alright I got me a big quantity them thanks!! Im fermenting tabascos and lemon drop
This is a GREAT series! I'm a new subscriber and looking forward to seeing your channel grow. It deserves a much larger audience!
I'm currently making a couple of fermented hot sauces for the first time and I'm excited to see how they turn out.
Did you test the acidity before bottling? From what I've read, you want something below 4.6 pH to preserve it (one of the sites you link recommends below 4.0). If you refrigerate or consume quickly then it's probably alright, though.
Also, are you concerned the fermentation will continue in the bottles (even when stored in the fridge) and cause an explosion?
I appreciate it! Glad to hear you are making some of your own hot sauces. To answer, you questions:
1. I do not ph test my hot sauces. You certainly can, but between the salty environment and acidic environment in the hot sauce I'm confident in keeping out any bad bacteria.
2. Once you put the hot sauce in the fridge, it severely slows down the fermentation, I haven't had any gas build up once I bottled it and put them in the fridge. Plus I'm using them a lot so any build up is let off. I would just monitor them if you are keeping them outside the fridge and keep the cap a little loose to let off any gases.
Hope that helps!
what you could do with the dried stuff is grind it and make it into a spicy powder
I bet if you ground that dried mash it would make a great seasoning!!
This series is awesome!!
You can do it by taste on the brine if you dont have a scale it should be salty but not ocean water salty
Ethan your channel is awesome. That's all.
I have lids just like it
Nice video, gonna try this today.
I love green Cholula but wish it was just a bit hotter. I might try this out with serranos and habaneros
I have been trying to find the best green hotsauce recipe. Doing a jalapeno one rn.
Would leaving the mash in to make a thicker sauce be possible (like a chutney texture maybe), or would it separate and be kinda gross?
I’ve made a fermented Tabasco sauce and I left the mash in. It does separate but just shake before using. My husband LOVES it.
there's another offshoot to take. I remember when I was a kid we got some chutney as a gift and it was GREAT! Haven't found any as good in 30 years. Maybe have to make some when I've perfected poblano sauce to my liking...?
Dear Ethan. 800 x 0,2 = 160 g !!! 2% means x 0,02 and than 16 g is OK. !!!
Do you keep refrigerated after bottling?
You need to refrigerate it to slow down the fermentation.
Seriously, Ethan has the classic gentleman vibe that not many food youtubers have.
I'm glad you specified new floors, what you did is how I got a 3 inch long piece of wood in my foot when I was 13 on some worn hardwood. Gonna try this hot sauce out! Love the vids man.
My foot hurt reading that comment, luckily these had a fresh coat on them. Glad you are enjoying them, thanks for watching!
Them are not jalapeños
Drain the brine. Blend. Add water n vinegar. Or fruit with juice and vinegar
I've followed the exact same recipe, albeit with yellow bell peppers instead of poblanos. I've stored it in the fridge for 3 days now, but I haven't seen any foam or bubbles or anything that might show it's fermenting. Do you have any tips? Or should I keep it out of the fridge? I've also used kitchen salt. Don't know if that makes a difference.
Keep it out of the fridge. Lactofermentation works better at temperatures between 70-80 F. It severely slows down or almost becomes nonexistent in cold temperatures like the fridge.
@@EthanChlebowski Thanks for your quick reply! I've let it out of the fridge for 8 days and it came out great! Added just a little thickened mango juice, cumin, allspice and ginger to make it a Jamaican mango habanero variant. Thank you so much for your video!
put your drid pappers in a grinder turn it into pepper spice jar
EC: I don’t even know what brand this is.
Me: It’s Crystal.
EC: It’s a pure Louisiana Crystal hot sauce.
Me: It’s Crystal. 😶
Great series though!
Make Spicy Fruit Roll Ups!
Never seen someone use ALL the brine in the sauce before. Interesting.
was shocked, too :D
Try using the leftover pepper mash in a chili.
Next level idea!
So I know you're the expert here, but are you sure those are jalapenos? They look like a habanero of some sort. Thin walls, the wrinkles, the color, etc.
Since it has no vinegar to preserve it I'm a bit worried about storage. How long do you keep it?
The brine is full of lactic acid
IMO you should ferment twice as long, skip the thickener, and know that jalapenos aren't orange.
hofmeyer88 To each their own. That’s why I said bare minimum of 7 days, but feel free to go longer.
Well aware haha, I left a text blurb where I accidentally called them jalapeños.
Great video, I found it on reddit. You've got another subscriber. If I could give you a small bit of constructive criticism it'd be that while mostly the production values on the video are great there's a slightly jarring audio difference between when you're speaking to camera vs. when you're doing a voiceover, the voiceover is much louder, (at 2:23 for example) maybe take the volume down a little bit on your voiceovers in future videos?
Everything else is great, you do a great job of explaining everything and I'm really looking forward to the rest of the series! I love hot sauce but never even considered making my own before.
Hey Vincent, glad to have you here. Thanks for the feedback on the audio. For the voiceover, I do it in a different room and get closer to the mic so it sounds a little better than the echoey room. I try to normalize the audio levels, but it could use some work, so thanks for letting me know!
Glad you are enjoying the hot sauce series, you definitely have to experiment with making some!
@@EthanChlebowski Cheers for the reply, keep up the great content!
So I have this Peruvian pepper paste I wonder if it's similar to the left over paste.
Orang japalenos lmfao way to show off the brilliance
You should consider adding a humor element to your videos. You're already half way there with the, "I'm not even sure what brand this "Crystal" hot sauce is, the Jalapeno-Habaneros, and calling fruits vegetables (Chile's are fruits) and that was only 3 minutes in. I know you weren't trying to be funny but I think you could do really informative videos, With corrections printed in the background, and be very entertaining. I would watch that.
He slipped and bragged about "new socks" at the beginning. That was most defnitely funny
"I really like the color of these Habaneros" made me shout "WHAT!?
I also love tiny orange jalapenos*.
*Habaneros
The orange ones are Habaneros ! Not Jalapenos he heee 2:37
Those are not Jalapeños!!!, those are Habaneros!!!!!
Did you just call habaneros jalapeños? 😂😂😂
Loving the series and tips. Not loving the food safety.
I can’t believe he has not commented to correct the error. Habanero, not jalapeños.
He did. On the screen.
I believe those orange ones are habanero, not jalapeño.
robotandroid74 Yep, I just misspoke. Left a text blurb pointing that out.
Aha! I guess missed the blurb. I’m digging your videos, BTW.
robotandroid74 no worries, glad you are enjoying them!
I tried this out but almost all bottles exploded. Help ? :(
Did you leave them sealed without any way for the gas to escape?
Can I use cornstarch instead of xanthan gum?
Yep. I would suggest adding it to some water and making a little slurry before adding to the blender so it doesnt clump
@@EthanChlebowski thanks E!!!
My fermantation is getting bitter..
Habaneros*
Why don‘t you just take 1 litre of water, then add your 2% salt and put it in the jar? no need to measure it
Those look like habaneros and not jalapeños ✌🏽
Those are not Jalapeños :D
Don’t double dip
Jalapeños 😂😂🤣🤣🤣 those are Habaneros 😂🤣 you can't make Hotsauce video when you dont even know your fucking peppers man 😂😂🤣🤣
Guy doesnt know the difference between a jalepeno and a Habenero and he is teaching people how to make hot sauce which if done wrong can actually kill you.. take a look at botulism and whilst you're at it find someone who knows what they're on about for fermented chilli sauce recipes. 👍🏽
Botulism doesn't survive in an acidic environment. There is no way you'll produce botulism (or anything like it) via lactofermentation.
jalepeno and habanero are different....
Can I use cornflour instead of xanthan gum?
Need to cook it first