I have been adding recipes for a while to a new cookbook so I could find them when I wanted to cook them. In the electronic age, a digital version seems to make more sense, since I can add, amend, advise, adjust, delete, and reconsider as often as I want to and you can access them if and when you please. I've included the recipes from my original cookbook which many of you have. I'm also going to be adding pictures as I retest many of these recipes. They aren't the latest thing or nouvelle cuisine. They're comfort food, good memories, treasured family recipes, and occasional treats as well as many healthier recipes I've grown to like in recent years. I encourage you to add comments, pictures, and favorite recipes to make this a real family cooking spot. It's the next best thing to sharing a meal.






Friday, July 10, 2020

Datil Pepper Hot Sauce

1/4 cup (not packed) seeded datil peppers (split in half and remove seeds and membranes.  Rubber gloves are good.  Don't touch your face until hands are thoroughly washed.). The amount is optional.  Depending on how spicy you like your sauce, you might start with less peppers and taste the uncooked sauce after it has been blended and before you put it in the slow cooker. If it is not spicy enough add some more peppers until it meets your approval. Datil peppers can vary in hotness from plant to plant and season to season.

1 large red bell pepper, chopped
1 large sweet onion
6 cloves garlic
14 oz. bottle ketchup
3/4 cup white or cider vinegar
1 15 oz. can fire roasted tomatoes
1/2 cup brown sugar
2 Tbsp. Worcestershire sauce
1 Tbsp. salt
1/2 cup red wine
2 cups fresh figs, stems removed
1 Tbsp. smoked paprika

Put all ingredients in blender (in batches if necessary).  Add to slow cooker and cook on high for five to six hours until vegetable particles are soft, mixture thickens, and flavors are blended.  Refrigerate, freeze, or can in boiling water bath for 10 minutes .  Makes about six cups of sauce.    

Datil peppers are a St. Augustine specialty, said to have been introduced by Minorcans.  The sauce has many recipe variations.  This is mine.  The figs are a traditional addition and add some unique sweetness.  If your datil peppers are not ready when the figs are, freeze the peppers and use them when the next year's figs ripen.  Easy to make and sooo good on anything you would use catsup on or stirred into vegetable soup, or with crab cakes or salmon patties.  

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