Hmm... Needs more chipotle...

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Apart from that, not bad.

Hamburgers. Add onion and garlic to taste (I like a lot,) then mix chipotle sauce into the meat before you cook it.

Top with crisped bacon, pepper jack, and (I know - sounds odd!) provolone. The provolone gives a nice "smooth buffer" to really bring the rest together, I think.

I'll try this next time using garlic cheese bread for a bun tho - that should work rather neatly!
 
Dammit, Jon...... I really don't need that kind of encouragement.

There's a bar down in Rochester, MN that has a burger with something like 3 cloves of fresh garlic in it. I sweated garlic for 2 days.
 
Dammit, Jon...... I really don't need that kind of encouragement.

There's a bar down in Rochester, MN that has a burger with something like 3 cloves of fresh garlic in it. I sweated garlic for 2 days.

Oh, that sounds good!

My wife hates it when I go to Mongolian BBQ (which I try to do about quarterly - gotta etch the lining out of my stomach and start again...) since I smell strongly of hot pepper and garlic for about a week! Not my breath, but my whole body...

But, apart from my own kitchen, it's the only place where I can get decently-spiced food. My granddad spent the best part of thirty years trying to find something too hot for me to eat - he found a few things that were too hot for him, but nothing that stonkered me.

First time in a Japanese restaurant, I ate the wasabi ball. Then I asked for something spicy to follow it with.

In Chinese restaurants, I have to ask several times to get the good hot mustard - the stuff they keep for themselves.

I've out-chiled Latino friends of mine, eaten hotter curry than most people from Asia Minor could stand; and I find that a good five-year batch of kimchi can really clear my sinuses when I need it to (that's about the entire physical effect of the stuff. Apart from that, I'll wolf the stuff down.)

I found out recently that mum left a bowl of jalapenos down where I could reach them when I was three. She had to run off to do something - when she came back, she found me sitting on the floor with about half the bowl left. And a huge smile on my face.

Reminds me, I need to get my hands on another bottle or two of Great Red Shark - it's something my oldest son brought back for me from his honeymoon on Maui (same place his mother and I went - but I wasn't looking for hot sauces then...) I'll usually pick up a couple of new varieties when we drive to Arizona as well.

I find Tabasco weak - I do five alarms with Insanity instead (One of my old party tricks was to drink Tabasco by the shotglass, and then dare other people to do it. I could usually lay a little action on myself, and clean up. As could people who knew me well - my kids would usually clean up watching me do it when their buddies first met me.)

One of these days, I want to do a pepper-infused rum (can't decide if I want to use typical Captain Morgan, or go with Bacardi 151. The 151 is promising, but I'd think the Morgan would complement it better. Although the idea of trying it with Spyritus would be interesting - 195-proof engine degreaser and paint stripper. Remi - y'listening? I still haven't found that stuff up here...)
 
I don't care for heat, just for heat's sake. I found that Dave's Insanity was just heat, with a little ash thrown in. And I've found that in general, I just don't care for pickled food at all (so that let's kimchi in all it's varieties right out.)

MN is particularly bland when it comes to food. The joke is that Pace once sold picante sauce here with a blue cap, extra mild. The local Chinese restaurant is definitely geared for the Minnesota palate, there's almost no heat in the hot dishes, even when ordered "No, I really mean it. HOT."
 
I don't care for heat, just for heat's sake. I found that Dave's Insanity was just heat, with a little ash thrown in. And I've found that in general, I just don't care for pickled food at all (so that let's kimchi in all it's varieties right out.)

MN is particularly bland when it comes to food. The joke is that Pace once sold picante sauce here with a blue cap, extra mild. The local Chinese restaurant is definitely geared for the Minnesota palate, there's almost no heat in the hot dishes, even when ordered "No, I really mean it. HOT."

Figures. "Heat for heat's sake" is fine when I'm in the mood for it, but I typically like flavour to carry the heat (which is why I enjoy chipotle so much. A "chipotle" is a fully ripened and smoked jalapeno pepper - so chipotle sauce carried a wonderful smoky flavour with it's mild heat. I like it - I'd like to find chipotle jack cheese instead of jalapeno jack, I think it would work rather well. Or even chipotle cheddar.)

Most of the "stupid hot" stuff I have around I tend to use for flavour - it's an awfully strong flavour, but it's still a flavour. Fill it out with garlic, onion, and a few other things to make it decent and we're in good shape. Not to say I can't handle heat - I certainly can, and I've proven it in plenty of cases. Just like how I don't tend to eat meat rare - I've eaten it blood-warm and freshly dead, I just happen to prefer it cooked through and well-done (sorry guys, but that's just how I am. I've chased enough dinner for one lifetime, I think. I don't care for beer here - overseas, it's not too bad. I'll cook with the stuff, but I'm not very likely to drink it...)

I tend to order Szechwan or Kung Pao and tell them to "Make it rather hotter than you normally do, would you?" and I still find it fairly mild. Takes a while before I can get a Chinese restaurant properly trained...
 
Apart from that, not bad.

Hamburgers. Add onion and garlic to taste (I like a lot,) then mix chipotle sauce into the meat before you cook it.

Top with crisped bacon, pepper jack, and (I know - sounds odd!) provolone. The provolone gives a nice "smooth buffer" to really bring the rest together, I think.

I'll try this next time using garlic cheese bread for a bun tho - that should work rather neatly!

Damn that sounds like a good burger. And I'm hungry and it's 8am
 
Have you tried Sriracha hot chile sauce? The stuff that looks like ketchup, but is just a little too bright? :) I love it. Real hot, but excellent flavor. Even my wife likes it and she hates all things spicy. She just likes it in smaller doses...
http://www.huyfong.com/no_frames/sriracha.htm
sriracha.jpg
 
I picked up some Chipotle White Cheddar last winter. I was thinking it would make a great burger/chili topping, but I ate it before I ever got around to cooking anything. Sitting was a delicate matter for a day or two.
 
One of these days, I want to do a pepper-infused rum (can't decide if I want to use typical Captain Morgan, or go with Bacardi 151. The 151 is promising, but I'd think the Morgan would complement it better. Although the idea of trying it with Spyritus would be interesting - 195-proof engine degreaser and paint stripper. Remi - y'listening? I still haven't found that stuff up here...)

A Mexican restaurant down in LA (gone now) used to do their own habanero infused tequila... I loved the habanero margarita.
 
Sriracha is some seriously good chili sauce, absolutely wonderful on eggs. My g/f & I are about halfway through a big bottle of the stuff. We keep it around, along with chipotle Tobasco, and a couple of other hot sauces.

Once I get a smoker built, I am gonna try my hand at smoking my own jalapenos. That's something I didn't put in my last batch of chili, a couple of chipotle peppers, and they're sorely missed. A chipotle jack or chipotle cheddar would be great on burgers or hot dogs.

I tried making a peach habanero hot sauce with home grown habaneros a couple of years ago, and it failed miserably. The peach didn't shine through, and it was all heat, and very little of the fruity goodness you should get from habaneros.
 
Sriracha is some seriously good chili sauce, absolutely wonderful on eggs. My g/f & I are about halfway through a big bottle of the stuff. We keep it around, along with chipotle Tobasco, and a couple of other hot sauces.

Once I get a smoker built, I am gonna try my hand at smoking my own jalapenos. That's something I didn't put in my last batch of chili, a couple of chipotle peppers, and they're sorely missed. A chipotle jack or chipotle cheddar would be great on burgers or hot dogs.

I tried making a peach habanero hot sauce with home grown habaneros a couple of years ago, and it failed miserably. The peach didn't shine through, and it was all heat, and very little of the fruity goodness you should get from habaneros.
I'd first had some on Okinawa at my favorite after drinking spot, My House, right outside the front gate of MCAS Futenma. Once I found it in the stores here, I've been keeping a bottle in the house at all times.
 
i need to quit checking this thread everytime i do im makes me hungery lol
 
allllright! this is my kind of talk!.. Im gonna have to try that Sriracha sauce...
 
Have you tried Sriracha hot chile sauce? The stuff that looks like ketchup, but is just a little too bright? :) I love it. Real hot, but excellent flavor. Even my wife likes it and she hates all things spicy. She just likes it in smaller doses...
http://www.huyfong.com/no_frames/sriracha.htm
sriracha.jpg

Got a bottle in the fridge - a big one.

You guys check out my thread on chili a while back? Another experiment that turned out surprisingly well!
 
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