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El Fuego Viviente Chili Open Sauce

One of my favorite hot sauces is Marie Sharp's Hot Habanero Hot Sauce . It stands out with its great natural taste and by using carrots and onions instead of sugars, which adds an earthy natural sweetness to it. If you haven't tried it, I can really recommend buying a bottle!

Inspired by Marie Sharp's, I decided to make my own version based on fermented chilis, carrot and parsnip. It turned out really well and I am putting the recipe online to make it easy to share and improve on.

Preparation tips

Translations

Ingredients

Wide-mouth clean jar to ferment in.

Steps

The Prep

Fermentation should begin within 1-3 days.

The Ferment

Let sit in room temp, away from direct sunlight for about two weeks, minimum seven days.

The Bottling

After the ferment, it is time to mix and bottle the chili sauce.

DONE!

It should keep for a couple of months at least.

Checking pH to make sure (optional)

Fermented foods are naturally acidic due to the lactic acid fermentation process that preserves the produce.

In order to double check that everything went according to plan, you can check the pH along the way. It should drop from around 6 - 7 to around 3 - 5, depending on what you ferment and how long you let it go.

Note, a pH value below 5 is really desirable, since it prevents nasty bacteria such as boutulism to thrive and it is a clear indication that fermentation has occured. Normally it is however obvious from the way it smells and tastes.

Regularly available pH strips will do, in case you feel like checking. The picture below shows a reading of a pH value sitting nicely between 3 - 4.

Variations

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Legal: License CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

Pictures from my first attempt