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  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

Tri-tip. A little bit of oil, salt and pepper to coat the meat. Garlic-herbs butter. Some veggies. 200ºC oven for 1~1h30. Bath everything every 15min. Juicy, extremely juicy. Cheers!

 

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  • Like 9
Posted

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Sous vide prime sirloin finished in a wok with salt and pepper
Zucchini sautéed with garlic sesame salt and pepper topped with sriracha

  • Like 3
  • Thanks 2
Posted

Cooking up some leftover smoked pork belly with a bit of brown sugar to make some ultra thick smoked bacon for my eggs.

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Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

  • Like 8
Posted

So funny! I bought all of the ingredients for your chili verde recipe earlier today because Claire got some tomatillos on Friday. Making it tomorrow or Tuesday but wishing I could eat it right now!

Posted

I used hatch and jalapeño peppers for the chili verde, which made it very smooth and not as spicy as with pasilla peppers. I learned this by making a burrito for testing purposes. 

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  • Like 5
Posted

Most pepper sites I've looked at list the hatch as equal to, or lesser, than a jalepeno - but there's often a caveat that hot varieties can be pretty darn hot (8,000 SHU).  So between the low and high heat versions there's a huge range (1,000 - 8,000).  

 

Posted

Hatch peppers have an oddly wide range of heat apparently. These were quite mild because I ate a chunk raw to check them out. I ended up with three large hatch and three large jalapeño even though I started with two each. The flavor is very good and I'm hoping it will only be better tomorrow after sitting overnight. 

  • Like 2
Posted

You can force a pepper to get hotter. If you stress a pepper plant after blossoming, it will produce more capsaicin.

You can also grow a jalapeno next to a habanero, and the second generation will cross pollinate, therefore making a hotter Jalapeno, and possibly milder habanero.

  • Like 1

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