Notes from the Peppermaster Archives

The Hot, the Powerful and the Flavoursome

Cooking for health and pleasure with the hottest peppers on earth.

Peppermaster Greg Brooks with Scorpion Chilli Peppers

Peppermaster Greg Brooks with Scorpion Chilli Peppers

Greg Brooks had been living two years in the Bahamas, when as an 8-year old boy he was served a conch salad containing goatpeppers, considered at the time to be among the hottest in the world. Oblivious to the fire in his dish, he bit into a goatpepper with a growing child’s appetite. His mouth rocked out of his body, tears streamed, he cried with pain. And then something strange happened: “suddenly I became aware that I could discern things I had not been able to see before. The world became clearer, I heard better, my sense of smell expanded – in fact, all my senses were alive. I made myself eat more raw goatpepper, and despite the initial shock, tears and sweat, I began to feel more aware of my surroundings. I noticed that when I was playing in the tropical forest with my friends, I could see the thorns and pluck mosquitoes from the air and I became much more in tune with the jungle. In a few weeks, I stopped being a Canadian boy from the city and acclimatized to hard outdoor life in the Tropics.

As an adult, back in Canada, I found that cooking with hot peppers helped me cope with the stress and strain of city life and the rat race – regulating the adrenal function, protecting my heart, burning fat acquired through sedentary living, reinforcing my immune system. The bonus is – they taste amazing. I love to cook with them!”

Peppermaster Goatpepper Mash made with fresh chile pepper

Peppermaster Goatpepper Mash made with fresh chile pepper

That journey with the goatpepper mash led Greg to experiment, working with the hottest peppers on earth. Currently these are the Trinidad Scorpion Butch T, the Bhut Jolokia, the Naga Ghost and the Red Savina. He has made mashes with all these chile peppers, and incorporated them in various hot sauces. Are the benefits of hot peppers only in their effect on health and strengthening of the senses? ‘I’m a professional chef’, says Greg, ‘so for me, flavour is as important as heat, if not more so. For those who like spicy dishes, the sauces we make with those four extra-hot peppers have both flavour and heat – we use the Naga Ghost in our Jerk Curry sauce, the Bhut Jolokia forms part of the mix in Fusion Fire, Stingin’ Scorpion is a classic hot sauce made with the Butch T and with the Red Savina, we’ve made a hot sweet sauce with mangoes, called Red Savina Mango.

One of the great culinary advantages of ultra-hot peppers is their capacity to bring out the flavours of other ingredients in any dish. ‘A tiny bit of Scorpion mash will bring to life even the flattest dish, and the heat will not overpower the flavour, it will enhance it. Of course, if you are really sensitive, you may want to use a milder mash.”

Peppermaster Scorpion Chile Peppers

Peppermaster Scorpion Chile Peppers

This desire to play with peppers to bring out maximum flavour is what sparked Greg’s experimentation with Elixirs (previously released as “Syrups”). “The peppers are cooked and strained, cooked and strained again, and again, until I have a pure extract to which I’ll have added raw organic cane sugar and fresh spring water. Because of its high concentration, only tiny amounts of Elixir are used. For example, to make a medium-hot soup for four people, I would use only one eighth of a teaspoon of Elixir. Greg has made Elixirs with Yakima Naga Ghost chili peppers, Red Savina chile peppers and Trinidad Scorpion Butch T chilli peppers.

I can confirm that. I am a lightweight when it comes to hot peppers, but now readily use the ultra-hot mashes to bring a spark to my dishes. A very small quantity goes a long way and just as the 8-year old Greg was woken up by his goatpepper, my cooking has livened up since I started incorporating the hot pepper mashes.

Peppermaster Scorpion Chili Pepper Mash

Peppermaster Scorpion Chili Pepper Mash

So how might these four hottest peppers be used in cooking? As classic hot sauce, of course – for those who like their hot sauce hot! Chicken wings will especially take off with the Stingin’ Scorpion sauce, while the Scorpion Mash can be used with seafood or meat in any Tex-Mex, Cajun, Carribean or any spicy dish. These will also work very well with the Red Savina or the Naga Ghost. The Red Savina Mango tastes wonderful in a Thai salad or a hot mango dessert. The Jerk Curry can form the basis for a classic curry dish, a Trinidad curry, or any dishes to which you wish to add a sophisticated and definite taste of curry. I have used it to make Sockeye salmon fishcakes and a sandwich egg mix. For hotter curries, the Bhut Jolokia mash can be added to a Vindaloo for the perfect heat and flavour combination. Greg has also added most of his hottest peppers to his steak rub – hot chiles tenderize meat and reduce its acidity.

A Pot of Peppermaster Stingin' Scorpion Hot Sauce

A Pot of Peppermaster Stingin' Scorpion Hot Sauce

All Peppermaster products are natural; free of chemicals, additives, and extracts. They are peanut-free and gluten-free, have less salt and avoid high fructose corn syrup. Many contain organic peppers and other organic ingredients, including the Red Savina and the Naga Ghost peppers.

Peppermaster Shop, Rigaud, Quebec, Canada

Peppermaster Shop, Rigaud, Quebec, Canada

Cooking for health and pleasure, I find these products are hot, powerful and flavoursome. To add this product line to your pantry, visit Peppermaster.com or the Peppermaster Shop in Rigaud, Quebec, Canada.

Suzanne Morel

Contempt

Greg Brooks, owner of Brooks Pepperfire Foods Inc of Rigaud Quebec shows contempt to ‘Harper Government’ Economic Action Plan. This plan, approved by CED, was to assist in a long sought $211,000 expansion to improve capacity for this niche market co-pack food processing company.

According to CBC news (@CBCNews: http://bit.ly/ghxNyS Jump forward to 10:43 to see the story) 3% of recipients of an approval for financial assistance from Canada Economic Development goes unused. That’s $1.8 billion dollars promised and not spent.

Now I hear that they are taking $26 million and are spending it on their current advertising program (is this amount included in reported Election spending limits?)that references frequently the ‘Harper Government’ Economic Action Plan.
And we thought we were dealing with the Government of Canada. When did our government change?

It feels like they have taken OUR money that was supposed to go to Canadians and are spending it on telling Canadians how great the Harper Government is. That makes ME feel contempt!

Perhaps WE should heed the warning from our poorer global neighbours. The message for us is to look at democracy and how our leaders show contempt for OUR country through their activities in the parliament of Canada and the image THEY present to us through the media lens with OUR own money . This, and legal head shots, such as personal attack ads being imported from less civilized countries, is changing the very nature of who we are. Pay attention Canada !

Greg Brooks
aka The Peppermaster, hard at work in Rigaud Quebec.

One of a Kind Spring Show 2011

A quick reminder to everyone that we will be once again at the Spring One of a Kind Show.

http://www.oneofakindshow.com/toronto/

March 30 to April 3 in Toronto at the Direct Energy Center

Will you be joining us?

These mashes are made by hand selecting the best fruit. They are designed to maintain optimum freshness for as long as possible without the use of preservatives. They are simply crushed with fresh lime juice and sea salt, balanced with citric acid, and then thickened with a small amount of natural gum and starch in order to maintain stability.

They will keep un-opened in the jar for several years, however optimum freshness begins to decline after about 6 months.

They will keep for two months after opening if kept cold, with no special care.

Once opened you can extend their fresh shelf life by several more months by keeping them clean, cold, and closed.

To preserve your Pepperfire Mashes follow these rituals:

Shake well. Remove the lid and pour the desired quantity of mash into your recipe or serving dish. Rinse the lid, and wipe down inside the lid with a clean paper towel. Wipe down the rim of the jar to remove any peppers or juice. Replace the lid. Return to the fridge. If you are finishing the jar within a month or two, this is the simplest way of keeping your mash fresh, longer.

If you follow these rituals your mash will keep for several months, depending on the variety, up to a year. If mould forms or fermentation occurs, you have lost the battle. Your mash has become contaminated, and you should discard it.

Your other option is to get one of those tiny ice cube (1/2”-1”) trays and freeze the rest of the mash. Once frozen, empty into a small plastic bag, and use the cubes when you want. They’ll keep for a year this way. If you eat spicy only on occasion, this will assure you of the freshest pepper mash when you really need it!

I hope this helps you to enjoy and extend both the freshness and value of your mash.

Need to get the last few drops out of the bottle? Squeeze in the juice of half a lime and slosh it around. Et voila!

All this thinking about lime and pepper has triggered an old memory. I’m wishin’ I had some fresh conch from Potter’s Cay, with lime and pepper rubbed into scored raw conch. The fishermen called it ‘Scorched conch”. Birdpeppers….mmmm.

Greg