Friday, June 1, 2012

Preserve Cayenne Peppers

Cayenne peppers get hotter as they get redder.


Cayenne peppers from the store or garden add spice and nutrition to recipes and salads. Cayenne peppers can be used fresh within a few days of picking from the plant or they can be preserved for a longer shelf life. Preserving cayenne peppers is simple to do and can be achieved in a variety of ways dependent upon your preference and taste.








Instructions


Dried Cayenne Peppers


1. Run tepid water over the cayenne peppers to remove dirt and debris. Move your fingertips over the peppers to remove stubborn dirt. Dry the cayenne peppers with a kitchen towel.


2. String cayenne peppers on needle and thread for drying.


Thread a sewing needle with coarse or heavy-duty thread. Pierce a cayenne pepper about 1/4 inch below the stem portion of the pepper. Bring the needle and thread all the way through the first pepper, leaving six or eight inches of thread at the end.


3. String all the cayenne peppers on the thread, leaving two to three inches in between each pepper. Knot the end of the thread after stringing the last pepper.


4. Cayenne peppers drying.


Tie the peppers in a dry, well-ventilated location. Allow the peppers five or six weeks to dry. The peppers can be left to hang, then pinch one off each time it's needed.


Pickled Hot Peppers


5. Protect yourself from coming in contact with hot cayenne pepper oils.


Slip the hands into rubber or plastic gloves. The oils in hot peppers can burn the skin if transferred from peppers to hands to face.


6. Run lukewarm water over the cayenne peppers and sweet peppers to remove any dirt. Dry the peppers with a clean kitchen towel then make two to four small slashes in the skin of each cayenne pepper. Cut the sweet peppers into four sections, removing the cores and seeds from each pepper.








7. Set the scored and cut peppers in a single layer on a baking tray. Heat the oven to 400 degrees Fahrenheit. Bake the cayenne and sweet peppers for six to eight minutes until blisters form on the pepper skin.


8. Immerse the baked peppers in a bowl of cool water. This causes the blistered skin to slip easily off the peppers. Remove the pepper skins with gloved hands and discard the skins in a sealed trash bag.


9. Canning jars help preserve cayenne peppers.


Press the heal of a gloved hand onto each cayenne pepper to flatten it. Put a mixture of cayenne peppers and sweet peppers in each of the nine one-pint canning jars until the jars are filled within one-half inch of the top.


10. Pour 5 cups vinegar and 1 cup water into a pot. Bring the liquid to a boil then add 4 tsp. canning salt, 2 tbsp. sugar and 2 whole cloves of garlic. Simmer the ingredients in the liquid for 10 minutes.


11. Take the garlic cloves out of the liquid, then pour the liquid into each canning jar. Use just enough liquid so there is still one-half inch space at the top of the jar, between the peppers and the mouth of the jar.


12. Add the seals and lids to the jars and place them in a boiling water canner. Allow the cans of preserved cayenne peppers to process in the canner for 15 minutes. Remove carefully from the canner and allow the cans to cool completely before storing.

Tags: cayenne pepper, cayenne peppers, sweet peppers, peppers remove, Cayenne Peppers, cayenne peppers