Now my friend Henry and his friend Beppe from Italy send me one load of chillies you would not believe! They selected the ones I needed to taste, although they have a lot more, they wanted me to taste these ones. So I dug in and as it appears, with the first bite I made a mistake.
Now excuse me please, but I did get a little excited unpacking, and got punished.
I unpacked one, bright yellow and a little orange, not pointy but irregular in a funny way.
The paper next to it said Cornetto Calabrese, so not knowing it I was taking good care but took a rather large piece from in between the seed lists. I felt like a chilli rookie again, man that pepper had me sing. Good grief it was hot, but tasty never the less, but boy did I sing. So I asked Henry if they always are that hot. Well then I understood I need to learn to speak and write Italian. Who needs Latin?
So, I thought I’d better taste on, I will get it later. The scent of this chilli is great, perfumy chinense, with fruits and sweets. The chinense part that sometimes has an irritating overtone in both smell and taste is not there, it is in balance. So tasting again, but more, much more careful. Tastng and smelling I get a scent and taste from Tea Rose, perfume. In the middle there is no sweets, no paprika but fruits and a bit of metal like bleeding. You get that in times if you eat superhot chillies like these. Rinse with milk and get back at it, smaller bits I take. In the tip of it I find a bit of sweet and tastes like pineapple. A little piece from the middle does give me a bit of a bitter, but not irritating as such, and again the tea rose and the perfumy chinense. At the top however I get apricot and tea rose as well as some paprika taste. This is one weird lovable chilli that is extremely hot, far hotter than a Fatalii.
So again I have a chat with Henry from Italy, asking what it is. In the end I show him the picture and the label that I thought belonged together. “Ah” Henry says “that is a Bhut Jolokia Yellow, and the best he has selected over more than 10 years”. Every time he only takes seeds from the plant he likes best, and sure did one great job. This my good readers is one chilli to respect, not feared, but used in little bits if you don’t want to be scorched. But this is a chilli that makes me think of a great Chili con Carne, that is subtle on the herbs. Good grief Beppe, I am so digging in the next one tomorrow. Thank you ever soo much, this is a superhot chilli I love !!
Yours sincerely,
Bart J Meijer
A blog about chillies, growing and the use of them. I will introduce you to different chilli varieties, their taste and ways to use and grow them at home and garden. Showing you that gardening is fun, and chillies look good in your garden! I will write some good recipes for hotstuff, hotfood, sauces and sambal. A good Chili con Carne recipe can make the day, or add some sambal oelek and herbs to your dinner to spice up your life! Spicy food can be very good, and does not have to over the hill.
Showing posts with label Naga. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Naga. Show all posts
Wednesday, 12 December 2012
Monday, 19 November 2012
Overwintering a chilli plant
Some weeks ago I told you about pruning a chilli plant for overwintering.
Now I have a good few plants in the house at the moment, all doing fairly well, I am pleased. So I was in the process of tasting chillies again. Now that does take a bit of time as I do have to do some research as well, to try and tell you the most I can.
Now with my head in tastes, with the accidental burn at times, I am trying to find words.
At times it is hard to describe a chilli, same as you tasted something new and had to describe the herbs. When I look at Hell’s Kitchen from Gordon Ramsey, I find it most amusing to see wannabe chefs that cannot pick out tastes like peanut butter. Very funny to look at Chef Gordon’s face as well. Sorry I am drifting off topic again.
So when I was staring out the window to get a grasp at a taste, my eye started to focus on a plant..
Good grief, I killed a plant, and then remembered my own tips and tricks. Please excuse me for killing 2 plants in fact, now you see an experienced grower makes mistakes too.
In a post before I told you about the hormone system of a plant. If a plant has ripe fruits, especially a chilli plant, it thinks it is done for the season. So if you pick the ripe fruits, it will ripen off the rest of the fruits. If all fruits are picked the plant will start to flower again, getting in a growing and flowering state again. Now that is all done by the plants hormone system. In fall and in winter it is much the same, with one major difference. If a plant has a ripe fruit on, it will start to die in winter, as it has done its task. How can I forget? Well with my head up the clouds. . .
So other than the regular tips for your overwintering plant, like don’t overwater; don’t leave ripe fruit in the plant. Now it the plant starts to get in flower mode again, it might drop all its flowers. Now that is a shame if you want to have good chillies early in the year. The main reason for flower drop is low humidity, and there is an easy fix to that. If you do get flowers and the plant is over a radiator or other form of heating, put some water in a pot on top of the heater.
If the flowers open, give the plant a little tap at times or a bit of a shake. The male and female parts are so close in the flower, as said in my post about isolating flowers, it will self-pollinate. But as I do so certainly hope there is no wind blowing through your house, give the plant a shake to imitate the movement of the wind.
Yours sincerely,
Bart J. Meijer
At times it is hard to describe a chilli, same as you tasted something new and had to describe the herbs. When I look at Hell’s Kitchen from Gordon Ramsey, I find it most amusing to see wannabe chefs that cannot pick out tastes like peanut butter. Very funny to look at Chef Gordon’s face as well. Sorry I am drifting off topic again.
So when I was staring out the window to get a grasp at a taste, my eye started to focus on a plant..
Good grief, I killed a plant, and then remembered my own tips and tricks. Please excuse me for killing 2 plants in fact, now you see an experienced grower makes mistakes too.
In a post before I told you about the hormone system of a plant. If a plant has ripe fruits, especially a chilli plant, it thinks it is done for the season. So if you pick the ripe fruits, it will ripen off the rest of the fruits. If all fruits are picked the plant will start to flower again, getting in a growing and flowering state again. Now that is all done by the plants hormone system. In fall and in winter it is much the same, with one major difference. If a plant has a ripe fruit on, it will start to die in winter, as it has done its task. How can I forget? Well with my head up the clouds. . .
A plant with black/purple fruits should be observer very good.
If the flowers open, give the plant a little tap at times or a bit of a shake. The male and female parts are so close in the flower, as said in my post about isolating flowers, it will self-pollinate. But as I do so certainly hope there is no wind blowing through your house, give the plant a shake to imitate the movement of the wind.
Yours sincerely,
Bart J. Meijer
Thursday, 16 August 2012
Chocolate, me and chilli - Grimreapers Chilli Chocolate !
I am not
really one for candy or sweets, in the sense like eating a bag in a day or a
chocolate bar in a day. Sure I do eat a candy once in a blue moon, or a piece
of chocolate if my wife puts in on the table. But really, I seldom see myself
raiding the fridge for something sweet. One exception is drop; that is what is
Dutch for Salty Liquorice (in North America called black Licorice), a candy
made with salmiak and Liquorice root. Dear readers, you can say anything about
that stuff, but it is wonderful. It has a nice balance between sweet and salt,
and got an odd rich taste. I can eat a box a day easy, but I try not to. While
writing this I just could not help myself, or did help myself with a good handful.
Really if I would be send off to Alcatraz, I would take Sambal, a pen and some
paper and a box full of Liquorice with me! Ok, where was I, sorry for rambling.
. .
So, I am
not one for candy, chocolate and so on. What made it worse I think is having
kids. At times I get a so-called lovely sweet from the kids when they are
sharing. Some of it is so sour it feels like my teeth are eaten, awful. And
the stuff with chocolate, boy, everything seems to have chocolate in it. Crispy
whatever chocolate things for breakfast, cookies with chocolate, even cruesli
bars with chocolate.
Believe me, after weeks not being able to eat a cookie without chocolate, or breakfast without chocolate you get sick off the stuff . . .
Worst of it all, it is a cheap excuse for a chocolate
containing very little chocolate if at all. So I get this big box in from
Grimreaper food UK, Russell Williams and guess what is in it? Chocolate. . . .
But as this is work related, I will have to eat the stuff, thanks Russel.
I tasted
the bar of Hellraiser, the milk chocolate version. But first, this is not
simply chocolate in wrapper; no this is really nicely looking packet with a
ribbon in it. A ribbon that my daughter fancies rightaway, and I do have to
admit, this looks stunning! The kids wanted to dig in, and told them not to.
They were a bit surprised and started protesting; “You don’t even like chocolate
!!!” So I took a little myself to see if it wasn’t too hot first, and was
stunned with the taste. This is one chocolate with a capital C! The taste is
superb and extremely well balanced, I can even taste the liquorice tones that
you have in the dried Naga Jolokia chilli which is used to spike this chocolate. I
hoped that I did not spoil the surprise that it was one good chocolate, with
the kids looking at me to try and see if I liked it. So I offered them a piece
and told them to take care not to take a big bite at once. They both took a
good bite, and even my wife wanted some. We all agreed it is superb, and the
kids wanted more. . .
We compared
it with another very good chocolate, and that really surprised us all, the Grimreaper
chocolate is by far better in its chocolate contend and taste!
This chocolate has the classic combination of cinnamon and orange, with a twist of garlic that is hardly noticeable but complementary and the full taste of Naga chillies. Surprisingly you can taste the herbs and fruit tones that you can find in the real Naga Jolokia, unbelievable! I don’t think it is too hot really, no, it is well spiked with the full array of tastes the Naga has without going over the top.
This chocolate has the classic combination of cinnamon and orange, with a twist of garlic that is hardly noticeable but complementary and the full taste of Naga chillies. Surprisingly you can taste the herbs and fruit tones that you can find in the real Naga Jolokia, unbelievable! I don’t think it is too hot really, no, it is well spiked with the full array of tastes the Naga has without going over the top.
Now my
daughter wanted to make a video review for Grimreaper foods, and that was not
done in one take. So after about 10 tries thus eating 10 pieces, it was on
video. Half an hour later or less I got the buzz of eating Naga chillies,
almost a high I would say, that I also got from eating a wild chilli from the Galapagos
Islands. The video was received with great comments, and the chocolate was received
by us with great joy!
This
chocolate I think is one to recommend, not only for hotheads for sure. No, this
is one I can recommend for anyone that wants to try something different,
something new and great !
Yours sincerely,
Yours sincerely,
Bart J. Meijer
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