Homemade Salsa
Salsa has become as common as ketchup or mustard. The difference
is that there are hundreds of kinds of salsa. The grocery stores have entire
sections of salsas. They come in multiple flavors, different levels of heat and
even with famous baseball players and celebrities on the label. I have made
many of my own flavored salsas. The one element that sticks out in my mind with
homemade salsa is freshness. When you crack open a jar of homemade salsa a few
months after making it and it tastes as fresh as the day you cut the
vegetables, there is an amazing sensation that comes over your taste buds. I
have yet to find a jarred salsa in the grocery store that can match such a
fresh and wonderful taste. After multiple attempts, I have come up with a
recipe that is fresh, consistent and well rounded. One small change and you can
make the batch as mild or as hot as you would like. You can even split a batch
and have mild, medium and hot just by adding additional hot peppers as you go.
This recipe needs to simmer for at least an hour and an additional 45 minutes
in the canning bath.
What you need:
Canning equipment (jars, lids, pot, etc.), Large stockpot
Ingredients (Makes 10 quart-sized mason jars):
24-26 salsa tomatoes, 3 onions, 1 green pepper, 3 limes, 3-15 habaneros
(depending on the level of heat you want), bushel parsley, bushel cilantro, 3
cans petite diced tomatoes, 1/2 cup ketchup, salt and pepper.
Directions:
Some people choose to de-skin the tomatoes. I personally leave
the skin on. If you choose to de-skin the tomatoes, dip the tomatoes in boiling
water for 30-60 second (until skin begins to split), then remove and peel the
skin off. Slice the tomatoes vertically in half. Lightly squeeze the seeds out
(some seeds can stay in the tomatoes). Dice the tomatoes into small even
pieces. Add the tomatoes to the large stockpot and place the heat on medium.
Add the cans of petite-diced tomatoes. (Why use the cans of tomatoes? The cans
add liquid to the salsa without watering it down. I found this helps the
flavors blend better.) Add the ketchup and the juice of the 3 limes. Cover
the pot and begin dicing the 3 onions and green pepper. Add the onion and green
pepper to the pot. Next, mince the habaneros and add them to your salsa mix.
(Be careful! Gloves may not be a bad idea and DO NOT touch your eyes or nose
after cutting, it will burn!) This step is where you can decide how hot you
want the salsa to be. Mild should be 3-5 habaneros, medium 6-10, hot 10-15, and
extremely hot 15+. (See note below for multiple levels.) Add salt and pepper to
taste, I would recommend a tablespoon of each. Let the mix simmer for 1 hour.
Prepare the fresh cilantro and parsley by chopping them into fine pieces. These
will burn if you add them now. Wait until you have simmered the salsa for 1
hour, then add them and stir with the heat off just before canning. While you
wait for the salsa, prepare your canning jars by sanitizing them in a solution
or running them in your dishwasher with the heated dry cycle on. Begin boiling
water in your canning pot. Once ready, ladle the salsa into the jars leaving a
1/2” space of clearance from the top of the jar. Carefully put the self-sealing
lids on the jars and place into the canning pot of boiling water for 45
minutes. Remove the jars, let cool, then label and store your salsa until you
are ready to enjoy! Cheers!
NOTE: For multiple levels, add additional habaneros as you jar the
salsa. If you split the batch in two, add half the recommended amount of habaneros
to your second portion of the batch. Example: For half medium and half
hot, start with 6-10 habaneros for the entire batch. After canning the first
half, add only 2-3 habaneros to the second half of the batch.
No comments:
Post a Comment