Preserve peppers before smoking -- freeze or dehydrate?

Preserve peppers before smoking -- freeze or dehydrate? - Spice Bottles on Shelf

I would like to make some chipotle (smoked red jalapeno peppers) at home. Currently I am building a smoker in my garden, where I also I grow a few jalapeno plants.

My problem is that the peppers are turning red already, but the smoker is not finished yet. All the chipotle recipes that I found put fresh red jalapenos in the smoker.

Can I preserve the peppers somehow before I finish the smoker? I believe it should take me about a month to finish. I was thinking about either freezing them or dehydrating them -- which way is better? Or is there some better way?

I found this question that says that it is certainly possible to smoke dried peppers, but the result does not have the smoky aroma as intense as if you make it out of fresh peppers.

I've read that you can substitute the smoker with a grill, but I'm not sure I'll have access to any, so that's not really an option for me.



Best Answer

Freezing is definitely the way to go. It’ll soften the peppers, but smoking softens them anyway. Dehydrating them will allow them to burn before they’re smoked through, since the water in the peppers’ flesh is needed to keep the interior temperature under control during long smoking.




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Preserve peppers before smoking -- freeze or dehydrate? - Spice Bottles on Shelf
Preserve peppers before smoking -- freeze or dehydrate? - Rocky rough terrain covered with snow



Quick Answer about "Preserve peppers before smoking -- freeze or dehydrate?"

Freeze them for future meals or preserve them in oil, or just hold them in the fridge where they will last a couple days. You can smoke longer if you'd like, as the peppers will not be completely dried after 3 hours.



How to preserve peppers - Dehydrating and freezing methods




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