Keeps Gettin’ Pepper, Roasted Peppers

The best way to make delicious roasted peppers is actually not by roasting them but by grilling them. Who would have thought…….

The best peppers tBushels of Pepperso use for this are Holland Bell Peppers or domestic bells; you want to look for firm, ripe, and as thick-skinned as possible.

How do you tell whether a pepper has a thick skin or not? You can tell by looking at a pepper as it looks plumper and rounder, and when you pick it up and squeeze it lightly, it will have a firmer feeling than a thinner skinner pepper.

You can also make roasted hot peppers, but you want to be aware of the hotter the pepper, the better you should make sure your grilling area is well ventilated!

I prefer to use red, yellow, and orange bell or Holland peppers; green peppers generally have thinner skins and not as much flavor when roasted/grilled. Green peppers are unripened colored peppers and tend to not have a lot of flavor to them anyway, and can also be bitter. Green peppers have not had the chance for the natural sugars to develop as the pepper ripens. You will never find a green pepper in my house; neither my husband nor myself like them, and I can’t recall in 20 years in business ever using them on any of my menus.

Peppers are also high in Vitamin C, with even the humble green pepper having twice as much as an orange. Yellow and orange peppers more than 6 times as much Vitamin C as an actual orange.

There are also purple peppers, white, striped, black heirloom, mini sweet, cubanelle, banana, cherry (or pimento), and many varieties of hot peppers from all over the world.

All are fantastic for roasting (grilling) and stuffing for appetizers, an example like roasted jalapenos stuffed with cream cheese, cheddar, garlic, and dill. Banana peppers and other larger peppers can be stuffed with rice, vegetables, and meat, poultry, or fish. Larger peppers don’t generally hold up to roasting/grilling first and then stuffing unless they are placed in some sort of large ramekin or individual baking dish to hold it up as the skin tends to get a bit on the floppy side.

Grilled/Roasted Peppers displaying donenessMethod:
Wash your peppers and pat dry. You don’t want to cut the peppers out or remove the seeds in advance, this will be done after cooking.

Heat up your outdoor grill: charcoal or gas. You can also grill them indoors if you have a gas stove using a grate on top of the burners but be warned, it can cause some floating black debris in the air.

For a little extra added flavor add some wood chips, smokiness gives the peppers a little bit more depth of flavor.

Place the peppers directly on the grill and let the skin blacken until almost the entire surface is black, there can be pockets of color, don’t let it get to the point where you are seeing ash grey on the skin (you have cooked them too much by then if you see this). 

Turn the peppers until the entire exterior is well singed. (ie blackened but not totally black). The perfect peppers are ones that you stand and watch and baby the peppers, frequently turning so they don’t get overdone. The perfect balance is seeing when the skin starts to pucker and pull away from the flesh underneath it.

Remove the peppers and let cool until they are easy to pick up comfortably. (Do not cover the peppers). I’ve seen it suggested to do this but I’ve found when you cover the peppers can get overcooked and get quite mushy.

Using a rubbing motion with your thumbs, gently remove the skin for the peppers, it will come away very easily. And rub off any seeds as the pieces start to gently come apart. The stem is also easily pulled off at this point.

If you are using this for hot peppers, WEAR GLOVES! The natural capsaicin in hot peppers is very painful if you get in your eyes by accident or you touch other tender parts of your anatomy. Even heavy hand washing does not remove all the natural oils from this. Trust me on this, I could tell you some stories of line cooks being warned about this and ignoring the warning. I’ll leave that up to your imagination, but I think you probably catch my drift.

Don’t wash your peppers after removing the blackened skin as this will remove the natural flavors and oils that have come out.

Refrigerate the peppers and cover only when completely cool; within several hours the peppers will exude a natural juice. Don’t strain the juices off because marinating in these juices is the best way to keep them AND enhance the flavor.

Peppers prepared this way will store up to a week refrigerated. They taste even better on day two, after they have had a chance to sit in their natural juices and marinate.

When I have roasted pepper juice leftover, it makes a great base for a vinaigrette, or I add it into soups, stocks and sauces. It freezes well as well. If you make roasted pepper salad dressing whether it’s a vinaigrette or dairy or a mayo/egg-based dressing, go ahead and add that juice right in as well, it’s condensed roasted pepper flavor,

Roasted peppers do get a bit mushy if frozen, but if using them for soups or sautéed dishes, they work fine. The best way to freeze for sautéing is toss them in a little bit of pure olive oil before freezing and wrap well. They do pick up freezer odors. If using for soups, you may want to not use the olive oil depending on the end usage, but again may sure you wrap well.

A few variations on the basic roasted peppers is marinating in some olive oil, I prefer pure vs EV, but that’s a matter of taste preference. Garlic and fresh herbs are also a nice addition. My personal favorites are fresh thyme and/or rosemary. Roasted garlic is also a nice addition, but I wouldn’t marinate the peppers in it for more than a day, or all you will taste is roasted garlic and not roasted pepper. A recent addition that is fantastic on roasted peppers that we have fallen in love with is black garlic salt. It’s pricey but worth it with a lovely subtle sweet garlic flavor.

Lend Me Your Ears, Honey Cornbread for the Win

CornbreadI admit it; I used to be a sucker for Thomas’ Corn Toasties/Toast-R-Cakes. I bought some recently and was not as in love as I used to be; either they changed the recipe or it had just been a while (decades…..), similar to remembering old movies from the 80’s you thought were hilarious and then watching them again and saying, geez that was kind of dumb.

In any case, I love cornbread, and so began the quest for the perfect cornbread that tasted like what I think was the illusion of yumminess that Corn Toasties used to have for me.

When the pandemic first hit, we had some shortages at our local grocery store (the great toilet paper hoarding notwithstanding) and small containers of milk became non-existent in the dairy aisle. So it was a gallon of milk or bust. Now neither my husband nor myself drink milk; we eat plenty of dairy and have 1/2 and 1/2 and heavy cream on hand all the time. AAAANNNNND I know I can dilute both to make milk for baking, but honestly, I love my heavy cream, and using up the 1/2 and 1/2 meant for coffee and tea (plus it’s pricier) isn’t an option.

Off I went to research what was the best powdered dry milk. I found Peak dried whole milk (from Holland) in a huge can and promptly fell in love with it for baking. Add a little more powder than called for and get a creamier product. Plus it’s shelf-stable and no more tossing milk, which was more than enough waste after the first few times.

I’ve tried dozens of cornbread recipes and many dozens more of the faux corn toastie recipes, and I think I’ve finally ended up with the perfect blend of sweetness and moistness for at least my taste buds. My husband is not a cornbread fan, and I know I have a winner; when I cajole him into trying a little, he takes a small slice out and then eats a crumb but then eats the full slice and says, “it’s good”. For me, that’s a win-win.

*A note, as soon as this is cool, make sure you wrap promptly; it does dry out quickly.

Preheat oven to 375

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups water + 8 tablespoons Peak dried whole milk powder (or 2 cups whole milk)
  • 2 eggs
  • 1/2 cup honey
  • 1/2 cup Crisco (melted)
  • 2 cups medium grind yellow cornmeal (I like the Great River Organic cornmeal, which has not removed the germ and bran, so it’s a tad healthier, plus it has a nice flavor and consistency)
  • 1 1/2 cups AP flour
  • 1 1/4 cup sugar
  • 6 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1 tablespoon kosher salt

Cornbread in a panMethod:

  1. Sift all the dry ingredients together.
  2. Blend milk (or milk powder and water), eggs, honey, and room temperature melted Crisco.
  3. Stir in the dry ingredients and mix until fairly smooth.
  4. Pour into a greased (I use Vegelene Spray) 10 X 13 half pan (commercial) or a 9 X 13 baking square (retail); this can also be done in deep sheet pans or muffin tins depending on usage.
  5. Bake for approximately 40 minutes (less for muffins and sheet pan) until a toothpick inserted comes out dry. The top will be golden brown.

Serve warm.

This would be very nice with the addition of some grilled corn mixed with the batter, some nice double-smoked chopped bacon, or a nice, tart, slightly spicy, corn and peppadew salsa on top to balance out the sweetness if you wanted more of a sweet and savory blend.

Cherry, Pecan, Spiced Apple Loaf or Cake

Makes 2 loaves or 1 ea. 10 Inch Springform Pan, a Bundt pan can be used as well

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups AP flour
  • 1 tea ground cinnamon
  • 1 tea ground nutmeg
  • 1 tea ground allspice
  • ½ tea Kosher salt
  • 1 cup unsalted butter, softened
  • 2 cups sugar
  • 4 large eggs
  • 1 tea baking soda
  • 1 table warm water
  • 1 tea maple syrup
  • 3 apples – peeled and small diced
  • ½ cup dried cherries
  • ½ cup chopped toasted pecans
  • ¼ cup confectioners’ sugar for dusting

Directions:

  • Preheat oven to 350 degrees F
  • Butter a 10 inch Bundt pan or 2 loaf pans.
  • Whisk together flour, spices, and salt. Set aside.
  • Cream together butter and sugar.
  • Add in eggs and maple syrup.
  • In a separate bowl, stir together baking soda and 1 tablespoon warm water, and add into the sugar mixture.
  • Stir in the flour mixture, apples, dried cherries and chopped pecans until well blended.
  • Pour batter into the prepared pan.
  • Bake for approximately 1 hour, or until a knife tip or toothpick comes out clean.
  • Dust with confectioners’ sugar and toasted pecans when cool

A nice accompaniment to this is a nice cherry or apple flavored whipped cream or vanilla ice cream

Flavored whipped cream:
1 cup Heavy Cream
1/4 cup powdered sugar
1/4 cup flavored liquor of choice
Pinch of Kosher salt

With a stand or hand mixer, combine all ingredients in a chilled bowl, it helps if the heavy cream and liquor is as cold as possible prior to mixing. I put my mixing bowl in the fridge for about half and hour prior. You do want to make sure your bowl is as free of other moisture as possible. Whip on high until stiff peaks form. Adulterate with additional booze to taste. If you don’t want to use alchol in the recipe there are non-alcoholic alternatives or you can use extracts, keep in mind most extracts do have alcohol bases (at least the good quality ones do).

I’m not sure where the original of this recipe came from, it’s one I’ve used for years in restaurants I’ve worked at and the base recipe is a typical quick bread/quick cake that you can pretty much add any fruit or nut additions to.

This recipe freezes well and keeps well in the refrigerator for about 5-6 days.