Chili con Carne du Peppermaster

Si c’est pour un party du Superbowl ou juste pour le souper d’un Samedi, cette recette de chili con carne vous promettre de remplir la vide avec une chaleur profonde et enrichie. Il est meilleur mangé avec l’accompagnement d’un pain à maïs, une généreuse goutte de crème sûr et un bock d’une bière locale et artisanale.

Ingrédients:

1 lb viande haché
1/4 tasse d’ail frais
1 grande onion sucrée, coupée
2 tasses de piments frais coupés (poivrons et/ou piments)
1/2 c. à thé sel marin
28 oz tomates, en boites
19 oz fèves haricots rouges, en boites
1/2 c. à table poivre noir
1/2 c. à table basillic
1/2 c. à table cumin
1/2 c. à table origan
1/ c. à table thym
1/4 tasse de poudre de chili moulu
1/4 tasse de Chili Chocolat Peppermaster

Ingrédients pour garnir (optionnels):

Une éclaboussure de Sherry
Une goutte de Crème sûr
Une pincée de fromage gratinée chedder ou jack
Un morceau de pain maïs, un bol de chips de maïs ou autre portion de pain
Sauce Incendiaire de Peppermaster pour ajouter le vrai feu

Diréctions:

Sauté la viande avec l’ail. Ajouter tous les autres ingrédients. Porter a bullition.

Servir.

Ajouter les garnissements à gout. Nous aimons laisser nos invités choisir leur propre garnissements.

Bon appétit!

Cette recette est grace à Tina Brooks de Brooks Pepperfire Foods, Inc. manufacturier des sauces piquantes et co-packer de Québec, Canada.

Tina twit sous le nom @Pepperfire

Peppermaster Chili con Carne

Whether it’s for a Superbowl party or just Saturday night dinner, this chili con carne recipe promises a dark rich stomach filling warmth that is best accompanied with corn bread, a little sour cream and a bock of fresh local artisanale beer.

Ingredients:

1 lb ground beef
1/4 cup fresh garlic
1 large sweet onion, chopped
2 cups fresh chopped chili peppers (sweet bell and/or hot)
1/2 tsp sea salt
28 oz diced tomatoes, canned
19 oz dark kidney beans, canned
1/2 tbsp black pepper
1/2 tbsp basil
1/2 tbsp cumin
1/2 tbsp oregano
1/ tbstp thyme
1/4 cup ground chili powder
1/4 cup Peppermaster Chili Chocolate

Optional Ingredients for garnish:

A splash of Sherry
a dollop of Sour Cream
a sprinkling of grated chedder/jack cheese
a piece of corn bread, a bowl of corn chips, or other serving of bread
Peppermaster Fusion Fire to taste for real fire

Directions:

Fry the beef with the garlic. Add everything else. Bring to a boil.

Serve.

Add optional garnishes to taste. We like to allow our guests to add the garnishes.

This recipe is written by Tina Brooks, Brooks Pepperfire Foods, Inc. Hot Sauce manufacturer and co-packer of Quebec, Canada.

Tina Tweets as @Pepperfire

The Health Benefits of Hot Sauce?

I was referred a tweet on Twitter by my dear friend Ariane Griffiths, @fdnstudio: “RT @moeturner: @theresaalbert, Question for you… what are the health benefits of Hot Sauce? Asking for my DH”

The response by @theresaalbert was essentially that hot sauce is good for you. See the blog here: Hot Sauce 101, Unique Benefits.

In essence, the post insinuates that all hot sauces are good for you. But are they really? Come, let’s explore…

We know that capsaicin is good for you. Many universities have duplicated the 2000 studies done by University of Laval that show that capsaicin can help you lose weight and that in and of itself is proven “health benefit”.

Interestingly, there are two schools of thought when it comes to vinegar, the main ingredient in the vast majority of hot sauces:

The first school is that vinegar is bad for you; it dries out the blood, it is caustic, being made of acetic acid and thus shouldn’t be eaten in large quantities. Of course, the second school of thought says that vinegar is good for you; According to the Straight Dope, vinegar isn’t so bad as one might think. It actually does have valuable health benefits, read the article on vinegar by clicking here: The Straight Dope: Is consuming vinegar to excess dangerous?

As you can see, given the combination of capsaicin and vinegar, it’s pretty hard to argue that hot sauce is bad for you.

Of course, once you decide you’re going to add hot sauce to your diet BECAUSE it is good for you, you should be asking the question: “Are all hot sauces created equally when it comes to health benefits?”. And for us here at Brooks Pepperfire Foods, inc., the answer can only be a resounding; “NO!”.

Thanks to Bambi Blue’s research and writing for Brooks Pepperfire Foods inc., @BambiBlue, I offer you the following text as reasons for choosing pure fresh pepper based hot sauces as opposed to those made with pure vinegar:


Vitamin P

Vitamin P is an alternative name for bioflavonoids. Bioflavonoids together with Vitamin C, maintain the health of the thin walls of the small blood vessels known as capillaries, preventing bruising and bleeding, including excessive menstrual loss. Together, they are also anti-viral and anti-inflammatory, and inhibit histamine release – perfect for treating flus, colds, sinus infections and more! They also act as antioxidants and greatly aid the body in iron absorption, according to the International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents (26 (5): 343–356).

CURRY:
may help to prevent certain diseases, including colon cancer and Alzheimer’s disease, according to researchers at the oncology department of Leicester University.

BLACK PEPPER:
Piperine, a substance present in black pepper, has been shown to dramatically increase absorption of selenium, vitamin B, beta-carotene and curcumin as well as other nutrients, according to the CRC Press (1993).

CHILLI PEPPERS:
Red chilli peppers contain high amounts of vitamin C and carotene (provitamin A)
Yellow and especially green chilli. peppers (which are essentially unripe fruit) contain a considerably lower amount of both substances.
They are a good source of most B vitamins, and vitamin B6 in particular.
They are very high in potassium and high in magnesium and iron.
Their high vitamin C content can also substantially increase the uptake of non-heme iron from other ingredients in a meal, such as beans and grains.
Capsaicinoids, the collective phytochemicals found in all hot chilli peppers, are shown, in laboratory settings, to cause cancer cell death in rats. (Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 354 (1): 50–5)
Capsaicin in chillies has been found to inhibit chemically induced carcinogenesis and mutagenesis in various animal models and cell culture systems. (Perry, L Science 315: 986-988)
Recent research in mice shows that chili (capsaicin in particular) may offer some hope of weight loss for people suffering from obesity.(Hsu CL, Yen, 2007. J. Agric. Food Chem. 55 (5): 1730–6)
Researchers found that the amount of insulin required to lower blood sugar after a meal is reduced if the meal contains chili pepper. (Gale, Cengage Learning, 2008)
Capsaicin is a safe and effective analgesic agent in the management of arthritis pain, herpes zoster-related pain, diabetic neuropathy, postmastectomy pain, and headaches. (Purdue University Department of Horticulture and Landscape Architecture 2009)
A study from Laval University in Quebec found that men who consumed coffee plus jalapeno, habanero, or cayenne pepper-packed snacks and meals were able to burn nearly 1000 more calories a day than a control group.

So what is in the bottle in addition to the capsaicin and the vinegar can and will make a difference to the health benefits of the hot sauce. Add a little curcumin or black pepper and you’ve got an even healthier product, add fresh peppers, and replace most of the vinegar with fresh fruit juice and now you’ve really got a hot sauce that’s good for you.

There are companies such the ones we co-pack for at Brooks Pepperfire Foods, such as ChefJono.ca and Jake Albert’s and other manufacturers perhaps more or less well-known, such as Ring of Fire and Denzel who also use fresh chillies in their sauces. Turning a fresh chilli into a fermented chilli changes the health benefits of the peppers themselves, so, a fermented pepper sauce, although very good for you on the basis of the capsaicin and the vinegar, isn’t going to have the other benefits of a fresh pepper sauce.

And if you take it one step further and find companies that are specifically growing their own peppers or who, like us, make a point of buying direct from the pepper farmer you are promoting the sustainability of the food industry, especially if the chillies are all naturally or organically grown.

So, since fresh peppers are good for you, capsaicin is good for you and vinegar is good for you, then all hot sauce is good for you, right? Um, well, as nice a thought as that is, we know it is not quite true.

See, there is this little thing called “natural pepper flavouring”, “natural pepper extract”, “capsaicin extract” etc. and it has several different names meaning mostly the same thing. Someone somewhere took some fresh peppers, soaked them in a ketone (nail polish is a ketone), and then evaporated the capsaicin out of the pepper and what they created is a dark oily sludge that tastes like chemical death. They add it and a few spices to a bottle of vinegar and call it hot sauce. Many hot sauce eaters swear by it, they like the intensity of the high heat that the capsaicin allows their hot sauce to have. I personally think it tastes horrific, but I also think green beans taste horrific, so what do I know? My great difficulty with these cap extracts, as they are commonly called by hot sauce eaters, is that the FDA allows 50 ppm of the ketone to be left in the capsaicin in order to be considered food grade. And, you don’t have to be in the food industry to know that trusting the FDA to ensure that food grade cap extract is always less than 50 ppm ketone, is foolish to the extreme. There are some products that use a steam extracted capsaicin and it doesn’t have the chemical taste that the others do, but it’s still a chemically forced concentration of chilli peppers, solely designed to make them hotter than Mother Nature made them. Necessary? That seems to be a personal preference and really only works for about 1% of the population, the rest of us, we’re really happy with hot peppers only as hot as they come naturally.

The bottom line here is that if you read the label, look for good quality ingredients, avoid the chemical extracts at any cost, then you can eat all the hot sauce you want. And if you look for a Fair Trade Certified Stamp on the hot sauce at the same time, you can help change the world one pepper at a time.

This list will be updated as more information becomes available.  Want to help add to it? Email tbrooks@peppermaster.com now. For more information, see this post.

Read the rest of this entry

Scott Roberts (@ScottRoberts) gave four of our sauces thorough reviews on his website:  THE OFFICIAL SCOTT ROBERTS WEB SITE

Here are the scores:

Peppermaster Junior Chili Chocolate 4/5

Red Savina Mango Sauce 4.5/5

Nirvana Naga 2.5/5

Sweet Goatpepper Chili Sauce 4/5

Check out what Scott had to say — do you agree? Leave us a comment, we’d be delighted to hear from you!