A zona quente

Jeff Stevenson do tio Jester louco é um homem querido. Isto é, o que obviamente faz seus produtos quis a uma parte de mercado maior e maior na indústria. Com prova que o perseverance pode pagar fora, o tio Jester louco é agora um rolling do trem para baixo e vapor do recolhimento. Com um slough [...]

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Por: Joe janeiro em 16, 2008 - 10:31 pm

ajirocoto1.jpgEu posso com segurança dizer que eu tenho tentado nunca um sauce quente do rocoto antes. Yeah, eu tentei crescer rocotos eu mesmo, mas sem um lote inteiro do sucesso. Rocotos é uma pimenta do americano sul que cresça nativa nas inclinações da escala da montanha de Andes e é um membro de Pubescens do Capsicum. Pubescens são chamados como esta'n porque as pimentas lhes têm um pouco do “fuzz pêssego”. As pimentas Thick-walled com sementes pretas que são suavemente resistentes à geada fazem a isto uma pimenta original para ser certa.

Sim, mas o meio original que podem fazer o sauce quente bom? Eu estou supondo que as possibilidades são boas, especialmente desde que estes chiles se realizaram ao redor por 5000 anos ou assim. Aquela é uma estadia longa bonita ir perto without alguém fazendo um sauce fora destes bebês. Por o tempo que é, o mistério de se aquele pode ser feito foi resolvido pelos povos em Bravo do Rancho. O Bravo do Rancho tem suas fazenda e produção principais sobre em Peru, mas distribui uma linha do salsa, dos vegetais, e de um sauce quente aqui nos Estados Unidos. Christopher Underwood of Rancho Bravo was kind enough to send us some samples, so I gravitated to the hot sauce first to have the chance to see what a rocoto hot sauce was really like. The ingredients are simple enough:

Ingredients: Fire-roasted rocoto peppers, garlic, vinegar, selected spices

It’s almost a South American version of a Louisiana-style sauce with mostly vinegar and peppers, with some extra spices mixed in for good measure. I kinda liked the bottle, save for the fact they put that silly flow-restrictor cap on it. I chucked that in the trash right away, since I want no impedance to my hot sauce pouring for my food. The label has a bit of a retro look to it (even if I managed to get some sauce all over mine) and doesn’t really grab your attention compared to some others, but it’s functional enough as well.

ajirocoto2.jpg

As expected, it’s a pretty thin sauce…roughly the consistency of Ragu pasta sauce. The aroma is mostly garlic and peppers, but it’s a pepper aroma I’m not accustomed to smelling, and that has to be the rocoto. First lesson in how not all peppers are created equal, even by smell alone.

Taste: The first taste is very strong on garlic and vinegar, but what follows is a distinctly capsicum flavoring that has no shortage on heat. Most information on rocotos rank the heat from 50k-250k Scovilles, but this one taste at about the same sorta heat level as a cayenne sauce, so I’ll arbitrarily put it at a 7/10 on my personal heat scale. While tasty-good, it has an almost “soapy” flavor to it. Passow was here and tried this sauce with me, and he agreed with that assessment. The flavor is not off-putting my any stretch, but you’d almost have to try it for yourself to get how the mouth-feel is with this pepper sauce. Despite being thin on ingredients, it’s a very full-flavored sauce and the pepper flavor takes over for some of the vinegary bite as you eat more of it.

As for its usage, your mileage with it might vary depending on your heat tolerance. I could easily pour it out as a condiment or as an addition to Tex-Mex and traditional Mexican fare such as tacos, burritos, and tamales. The flavor is also durable enough to mix well into foods, and it was a fantastic addition to marinara and other tomato-based sauces. I’ve been using it in fairly heavy rotation for the past week and like how it seamlessly pairs with most of my food choices.

Overall recommendation: While not being the most gourmet hot sauce you’ll find, it’s definitely worth trying for the novelty of the pepper that’s used to make it. Don’t waste time trying to turn your meager supply of home-grown rocotos into sauce…let Rancho Bravo’s version of it work wonders for your food. Garlicky and with enough heat to at least tingle the palates of most chileheads, it’s great mixed in your chili con carne, sprinkled over some tacos, or even as an uber-spicy steak sauce. The key is not how you use but just that you give it a try for yourself. If Rancho Bravo’s salsas are half as good as this sauce, I’ll have a lot more to write about. Enjoy!


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4 Fiery Comments »

Well, looks like someone beat me to the punch. I have an Orange Riccoto overwintering here in the house. I’m dying to make a sauce from it.

Sounds like it does make for a good sauce though. I just need to add a little “DD Magic” to it and we’ll see what we get!

Comment fired by Devil Duck — January 16, 2008- 11:26 pm


I met Chris in Houston. Great guy and very interesting to talk with. I liked the sauce too.

DD…I’m sure what-ever blend you come up with will be nothing short of “Damn Good”.

Comment fired by MSK — January 17, 2008- 12:17 am


Hi – I’d like to order this Peruvian Rocoto sauce you’ve reviewed.
How do I go about doing that?
thanks

Comment fired by Lisa — August 4, 2008- 10:29 am


Lisa,

You can get it straight from Rancho Bravo themselves, at this URL:

http://www.ranchobravo.com/index.htm

Let Chris know we sent ya!!

Comment fired by Joe & LindaAugust 4, 2008- 7:15 pm


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