How long will my pepper relish last, and how can I stretch it out?

How long will my pepper relish last, and how can I stretch it out? - Blond Woman Posing with Vegetables

Last year, I made a simple pepper relish out of some hot peppers that are grown on a local farm. The method I used was to saute the whole peppers for a short time in olive oil, then blend them in a food processor with vinegar, salt, and a little sugar. This turned out to be a really tasty treat, great on pizza, sandwiches, sausage, just about anything.

This year, I repeated the process. The relish is the single hottest thing I have ever put in my mouth, bar none. It's excruciating. It's so hot that after eating something like an eighth of a teaspoon half and hour ago, my nose membranes are still burning.

So this concoction is sitting in my fridge, and I have two questions: first, how long can I expect it to last? My thinking is that with the vinegar and salt (no sugar this time), I should expect it to last approximately forever. Second, what can I do to turn this volatile relish into something I'd happily add to a cheese sandwich?



Best Answer

I would dilute it with another sauce made the same way but with non-hot peppers if you want to make more of the same sauce you had last year. If you just want to use this up, two of my favourite sauces involve adding sriracha (which is pretty hot) to other sauces: added to mayo you can call it "sriracha aoli" as though you were on Top Chef, and it's yummy as a dipping sauce for meatballs, little pastry hors d'oeuvres and the like; added to plum sauce it is great in the places most people use plum sauce. I also put both sriracha and ketchup (but don't mix them) on hamburgers. So try mixing it into mayo, plum sauce, or ketchup, and see if you like what you've created.




Pictures about "How long will my pepper relish last, and how can I stretch it out?"

How long will my pepper relish last, and how can I stretch it out? - Assorted Spices Near White Ceramic Bowls
How long will my pepper relish last, and how can I stretch it out? - Three Condiments in  Plastic Containers
How long will my pepper relish last, and how can I stretch it out? - Assorted pepper spilled on white table



How long will pepper relish last?

Store leftover relish in the refrigerator, covered, for 1 to 2 weeks (it tastes best fresh).

How do you make relish last longer?

Store the canned relishes in a cool, dry place, between 50 and 70\xb0F. Stored properly, canned relishes should retain their high quality for about one year. Unsealed jars of food need to be treated as fresh. The food can be eaten immediately, or refrigerated.

Can you freeze pepper relish?

Freezing: This hot pepper relish freezes beautifully. I like to measure out 1/2-cup portions and spoon them into labeled, snack-size zipper bags, freezing each little baggie flat before placing them all together into a large freezer bag.

How long does pepper relish last in the fridge?

Relish that has been continuously refrigerated will generally stay at best quality for about 1 year.



Don't Prune Your Peppers!




More answers regarding how long will my pepper relish last, and how can I stretch it out?

Answer 2

I would recommend freezing in small batches for up to one year. In the fridge I think the lifetime will be more on the order of weeks. I usually make hot pepper jam like siracha and freeze in small containers that I can use within a few weeks once I remove it from the freezer. unless its a USDA approved recipe for canning or infused completely in vinegar it is probably not safe to leave out or for an indefinite amount of time in your fridge.

As far as making it more palatable, dilution is going to be your best friend. Find a hot sauce recipe and use that as your pepper base and add to weaker peppers like bell peppers, or if you want a hot mustard, mix with mustard, same with ketchup, etc. be creative and try tiny bits at a time to make sure the ratio is going to work!

Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Gustavo Fring, Mareefe, Mareefe, Karolina Grabowska