This website contains age-restricted materials including nudity and explicit depictions of sexual activity.
By entering, you affirm that you are at least 18 years of age or the age of majority in the jurisdiction you are accessing the website from and you consent to viewing sexually explicit content.
Me. Lacto-fermented hot sauces aren’t that difficult to make and can be adjusted widely to personal preference.
Lactate me some of that tasty fermented hot sauce!
I’ll take 6
I usually keep it to 3. One variant for eggs, one for tacos, one wildly experimental.
Current experimental batch has kiwifruit in it and while interesting, I won’t be doing that again.
I never finished the batch that I put some banana in, you want that one?
I’ll subscribe to the monthly “Wildly experimental batch” subscription please lol
Yeah it is easy, my basic recipe:
Bunch of peppers (Madame Jeanette), a lof of garlic and an onion, 8 grams of salt per liter of water, sterile jar and once a day I turn the lid carefully to let the CO₂ out. I like it to ferment for a week mostly, sometimes 5 days. It’ll keep fermenting after bottling anyway because I don’t pasteurize.
My wife is a big fan of omelet with this hot sauce.
Go on …
If you can handle a YouTube content creator bringing the young millennial/Z energy, Joshua Weissman is what I use for base recipe and then experiment from there.
https://youtu.be/uL8UJPQ_zoU?si=NvfMg7ftMjZB7985
Total time is a few weeks. Actual work time is an hour, maybe an hour and a half.
I forget if this YT video covers it, but I also add a quarter tsp of xantham gum to keep the finished sauce from separating.
Blender. Sieves or cheesecloth. Jar. Bottle for fermenting. Some equipment needed but nothing a lot of kitchens don’t already have. One can get more equipment that makes it easier, but it’s not required.
Yeah, I can’t stand his videos. But I might try to dig up a transcript.