The enlarged photo below shows the criolla sellas in various stages of development, from ripened (bright orange ones) to green one, to blooms. Look at all the white blooms. These produce in copious quantities. Seriously, it is hard to keep up. A restaurant in Lafayette asked me to grow these but since they are 45 minutes away, the cost of delivering the peppers is really prohibitive to making it an economical enterprise.
Criolla Sella Peppers |
Drying the peppers |
Dried Peppers |
Using a paring knife I cut the pepper in half and remove the seeds. I did make a batch in which I left the seeds in. This was very good as well as it added more heat and can be used as a spice on anything you like. This time, we're making chili powder or ground pepper without seeds. This is the very time consuming part. I enlisted Laura Lee to help me to do this. If you don't have forced labor, I heartily recommend making pepper with seeds included! I might also add that if you don't have gloves, don't put your fingers anywhere near your eyes, even after you've washed your hands. This is experience talking here folks!
De-seeding the peppers |
Dried, de-seeded peppers |
The modern molcajete |
I put it on the fastest setting and let 'er rip while I gather an empty spice container and funnel.
After it has ground for a while, keep checking until you have the consistency you like. If the picture below was scratch and sniff, I'd invite you to scratch your monitor and your room would fill with a smoky, flavorful aroma that tells you that a liberal sprinkling compliments red beans and rice, gumbo, mexican rice or virtually anything you want to put in on.
Ready for bottling |
I use a spoon and canning funnel to get the chili powder into a recycled spice jar.
Bottling the ground pepper |
8.9 ounces of Criolla Sella Pepper |
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