Here's something you'd never dream of. A hot sauce - made with milk! Traditionally it's made with the buds of the maguey, or agave succulent. I doubt they'll be available in other places so I'm not including them in the recipe:
Ingredients:
1/2 lt fresh milk
200 mls buttermilk
150 gms hot chile peppers (Thai or finger chiles would be good)
100 gms red, orange, yellow or green bell peppers
3 cloves garlic
100 gms onion
4-5 spring onions (green onions) with leaves
Handful of fresh coriander , thick stalks removed.
1 tsp salt
1 tsp whole peppercorns
Olive oil
Method:
Ingredients:
1/2 lt fresh milk
200 mls buttermilk
150 gms hot chile peppers (Thai or finger chiles would be good)
100 gms red, orange, yellow or green bell peppers
3 cloves garlic
100 gms onion
4-5 spring onions (green onions) with leaves
Handful of fresh coriander , thick stalks removed.
1 tsp salt
1 tsp whole peppercorns
Olive oil
Method:
- Heat the milk in a saucepan and turn off just before it boils. Allow to cool.
- Wash the chiles and remove the stalks and the seeds. Wash the bell pepper and remove the seeds.
- Peel the onion and cut into small pieces.
- Wash the spring onions, remove the root and any discoloured leaves. Chop small.
- Blend the milk, chiles, bell pepper, garlic, onion, spring onion and coriander leaf until fairly smooth. It doesn't need to be completely smooth; it's nice to have a bit of texture.
- Pour the contents of the blender into a large bowl and add the buttermilk, salt, peppercorns and a generous glug of olive oil. Mix well together and then pour into a large, sterilised jar with a lid. Put the jar in the fridge with the lid on, but loose. Do not tighten the lid, otherwise the hot sauce will "explode" out of the jar!!
- Open the lid every day to release the pressure. You might hear a hiss, which will be the gas escaping as the hot sauce ferments. you might also see bubbles in the sauce - that's fine, because the hot sauce is fermenting.
- After about a month, the fermentation process will stop. The sauce is now ready to use. Keep in the fridge, although the sauce will last for ages (I've just finished some I made 18 months ago)
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