Local Kids Give Fun Afternoon at Tito’s Thumbs Up!

Local kids visited Tito’s today and everyone got in on the fun.  One little girl gave her afternoon a big thumbs up!

Big Pickle Thumbs Up

Big Pickle Thumbs Up

Tito’s crew got in on the fun playing Wet Head.  Someone suggested we fill the hat up with pickle juice or jalapeno brine but we figured it was best of we stuck with water.

Tito's Operation Manager Gets in on the Fun

Tito’s Operation Manager Gets in on the Fun

FedEx Driver Is a Great Sport!

FedEx Driver Is a Great Sport!

It was nice to have some excited visitors liven up everyone’s day and was a nice break from packaging pickles and peppers!

One Month at a Time: Learning to preserve an excessive harvest

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Editor’s note: Reporter Bill Lynch started 2016 on a bold mission: to immerse himself in a different facet of life for a full month — every month — for all of 2016, and write about it along the way. The idea is to take something he knows precious little about, which fortunately is a longer list than you might expect, and learn about it by doing as much as possible. In August, Bill’s tackling the fine art of food preservation.

I’ve wanted to know how to can, pickle or otherwise preserve my own food for a while, since I moved into my house outside of Charleston a few years ago. I just haven’t done much about it.

For the last four years, I’ve kept a garden in my backyard.

It’s nothing spectacular. I usually grow a couple of varieties of tomato, some zucchini, a few carrots and whatever happens to look good in the seed catalogs when they start showing up in my mailbox in December.

I am not a great gardener.

What I lack in talent, I try to make up with flagging enthusiasm. I tend to be more interested in the planning and planting and less enthusiastic when it comes to cultivating and weeding.

Still, ever year, I learn something — usually, what not to do.

One year, I grew a 6-foot row of ragweed. It looked like eggplant to me, and I had plants over 18 inches tall before I figured out what I’d done.

Most years, I grow too much of something — too many peppers, too many tomatoes, too many onions.

I also have a couple of fruit trees. Some years, I’m overrun with apples. Other years, I end up with more pears than even the deer can polish off in a single summer.

This year, I have too many cucumbers.

I don’t even particularly like cucumbers. I just grew them because I thought maybe I could make ice box pickles.

I like pickles, but don’t like cucumbers. I’m not the only one.

In hindsight, two cucumber plants would have been enough, but missing the part where someone told me how many cucumbers you get per plant, I put in five. The plants have taken over half of my garden, and, with the rainy summer, I’m getting a pound or two of cucumbers just about every other day.

I’ve tried giving them away, but there are only so many cucumbers anyone will take. At least I couldn’t get rid of that many in the newsroom. Maybe if I’d frosted them like donuts and added sprinkles

I needed to do something before my late-planted tomatoes started to ripen and my kitchen was overrun with produce.

So I put in a call to John Porter, WVU agricultural extension agent and Sunday Gazette-Mail Garden Guru.

John is not just a go-to guy for basic gardening questions, which I’ve thrown his way a couple of times. He’s also a good source for other sort of home farming/rural living questions.

The extension office offers tons of information and hosts classes and workshops, including the occasional one about home canning, not that John needed to get a degree to learn things like canning and pickling.

He’s been doing it since he was a kid.

“I used to can with my mother,” John said. “My father used to can green beans outside over a fire in a metal drum that had been split in half.”

John didn’t recommend canning green beans that way, though it sounded kind of awesome.

“Food safety,” he explained.

Green beans, John said, should be canned with a pressure canner.

“They aren’t acidic enough,” he said.

I met John at his office, which houses a huge kitchen with three or four stoves, a couple of ovens, and more counter space than your average Taco Bell.

There were plenty of modern appliances, pots and pans of every size, and enough cabinets and drawers to hold all the stuff.

I was a little envious. My kitchen isn’t bad, but it is a little dated. Most of the major appliances were installed during the Reagan years and are slowly dying off. Two of the burners on my stove died last year, and I sort of have to kick the bottom of the fridge door to get it to shut completely.

For this lesson, I brought along my own cucumbers, but John was a step ahead of me. He brought his own.

“I got started a little early,” he said and showed me a large, clear plastic tub.

On the bottom of the tub were sliced, green cucumber sickles.

“The cucumbers I had were a little too big,” John said. “So, I cut out the centers with the seeds.”

In the pickling brine we were going to use, the seeds would likely detach and cloud the bottle. They also wouldn’t add much to the overall crispness of the pickles.

In this lesson, we were going to make bread and butter pickles, mostly because John preferred them. I was fine with whatever. I have a lot of cucumbers.

John walked me through the steps, first explaining that, to make the pickles crisper, he’d buried the cucumber slices beneath under several inches of ice and some pickling salt. They’d been chilling in the container for hours.

Pickling salt, he added, was important. It’s finer than table salt and isn’t iodized. Iodized salt can give the pickles a weird flavor.

The cucumbers had been sitting in the salt and ice for a couple of hours.

Before I’d arrived, he’d also started his canning bath in a big pot full of water, which was just coming to a boil.

Lids for the jars simmered in a separate pan of water, while the jars rested in the dishwasher. Wisps of steam rose from the closed door.

“A canner’s best friend,” John said. “It sterilizes and heats your jars for you.”

My dishwasher hasn’t worked in years.

John heated a mixture of vinegar, pickling salt, sugar and spices in a separate pot on the stove and brought it to a boil.

After draining the ice from the cucumbers, he added them to the pot and stirred with a wooden spoon.

“You want to use wood, if you can,” he said. Stainless steel was OK, too, but nothing with aluminum. “It can add flavors you don’t want.”

Once the pickles began bubbling, John took jars from the dishwasher and carefully spooned pickles and sauce into them.

“You want about half an inch of head space,” he said and then wiped the lip of the jar with a paper towel.

He wanted the lids to go onto the tops of the jar cleanly.

With a magnet-tipped plastic stick, he fished lids from the pan and gently placed them over the mouth of the jar before capping the lid with a thin, steel ring.

“Just twist it shut,” John said. “Don’t make it tight.”

We filled seven jars and then put them in a wire cage inside the bubbling canning bath. We lowered the cage into the water, and John pointed out the bubbles escaping from the jar. This was air leaving the pickles. When the canning process was completed, it would create a vacuum inside the jar.

“You’re trying to get anything out of the jar that could be a home for bacteria,” he said. “You don’t want anyone to get sick.”

Improperly canned foods can cause upset stomach, loose bowels and even death.

Botulism was the big fear.

“Botox,” John said. “It paralyzes whatever it touches. Doctors use it to paralyze nerves to remove lines on your face, but if you eat it, well bad stuff.”

It was less of a risk with some kinds of canning, like pickles, fruit and jam. The acid of the vinegar in pickled foods discourages bacteria and sugar is a preservative.

“It used to be tomatoes were fine to can,” he said. “But so many people are growing low-acid tomatoes now that often you have to add some sort of acid to them.”

Most garden vegetables, like green beans, potatoes and meat should only be canned using a pressure canner, which heats the contents of the jars hot enough to kill bacteria. But there are also other foods that shouldn’t be canned even using a standard pressure cooker — like squash and pumpkin.

“It’s not safe,” John said.

After 10 minutes in the water, John and I removed the jars and placed them on a towel to cool and dry, explaining that hot jars might cool too fast on the cool, bare surface and break.

“They’re pretty tough jars,” he said. “But it could get messy.”

As we waited, the lids sealed over the jars with a popping noise.

“You can tell they’re sealed if you can see a slight indentation in the middle,” John said.

If the jars don’t seal, he said, you should reprocess the pickles, put them back in the canning bath and try again or you just let them cool and put the pickles in your fridge.

“You eat them like ice box pickles,” he said. “You just need to finish them up within a week or two.”

John offered me half of the pickles we (mostly he) made and gave me a copy of “So Easy to Preserve” to be my guide.

“We sell them here at cost for $15,” he said.

It seemed easy. So I bought some jars and washed a couple of pounds of cucumbers from my garden.

Here’s a great recipe for Bread and Butter Pickle Slices

Reach Bill Lynch at lynch@wvgazettemail.com, 304-348-5195 or follow @LostHwys on Twitter.

Follow Bill’s One Month at a Time progress on his blog at blogs.wvgazettemail.com/onemonth/.

New Illawarra Brewing Company beer features jalapeno chillies

By GLEN HUMPHRIES   –  Illawarra Mercury

There might be chili peppers in a new beer from the Illawarra Brewing Company, but that doesn’t mean it’ll burn your tongue.

With the smoked jalapeno porter, it’s more about the flavor than the heat.

Beers made with chili peppers are not all that unusual – some even come with a whole chili pepper in the bottle.

But most of them focus on the heat and the burning sensation of the chili peppers, which can make drinking the beer an unpleasant experience.

“If it hurts you to drink it then we’re really defeating the purpose,” said Illawarra Brewing Company’s boss Dave McGrath.

“With this you get the smell of it and then a little bit of heat on the tongue. But it’s not something you start drinking and think ‘why did I do this to myself?’.”

The aroma from the beer is similar to picking up a fresh chili pepper and smelling it. But it’s at the back end, along with coffee notes from the porter.

There is a small amount of heat that comes in at the back end but it’s far from overwhelming.

The beer was the creation of brewer Tim Howard, who had to keys to the brewery and permission to experiment while Mr McGrath was overseas.

His inspiration was to make a beer with chili peppers that he enjoyed drinking.

“I just wasn’t happy drinking some of the chili pepper beers that are out there – it was just like drinking liquid burning chili peppers,” Mr Howard said.

“You want to accentuate the good flavors of the chili peppers and not just the heat. I wanted a beer that was going to accentuate the flavor but not overpower the beer. I wanted it to still be the essence of a porter, I didn’t want it to be a chili pepper beer.”

Mr Howard only used 2.5 grams of jalapenos per liter in what was a test batch of just one keg.

That one keg has already proven to be popular at the brew house – it was tapped on Saturday and it’s already more than half-empty.

But don’t fret if you’ve missed out – the feedback for the smoked jalapeno porter has been so good, Mr Howard will be making a much bigger batch soon.

Once they work out where they can source a whole load of jalapenos.

Grocery Headquarters Sales Review: Peppers

Lots of Tito’s Jalapenos Consumed at 2016 Tour De Jalapeno Bike Ride

This past Sunday the Tour De Jalapeno bike ride was held in San Marcos, TX.  This unique cycling event has three separate rides going on simultaneously: The 50 mile tour which is not timed and the jalapenos are not involved, the 26 mile race and tour which also does not involve jalapenos and the 26 Mile Jalapeno Race.

Tour de Jalapeno starting line

The 26 mile jalapeno race features cash rewards and two aid stations fully stocked with Tito’s whole jalapenos.  For every jalapeno a rider eats 5 minutes gets deducted from their race time.  In the past there was a 2 minute deduction but that was before Tito’s became an official sponsor at which point the jalapenos were  bigger and hotter than in previous jalapeno races.  It was fun to watch these competitive riders and their strategies for consuming jalapenos and continuing to ride in hopes of winning their respective age categories.  Jalapenos were placed into cups in quantities of 2, 3 and 5 peppers  so riders could grab the cup of their choice and start eating in front of the judges who ensured riders ate the entire jalapeno.

Tour de Jalapeno Jalapeno Cups

The first female to reach the second aid station at the 16 mile mark was a rider named Emily who had frozen a yogurt pouch the night before and consumed this cold yogurt along with the jalapenos in hopes of counteracting the heat and acidity of the pickled jalapenos.

Tour de Jalapeno Emily Posing

One male competitor to reach the aid station and start consuming jalapenos came equipped with his own bottle of Pepto.

Tour de Jalapeno Rider with Pepto

Another rider who showed up and was consuming jalapenos at first laughed about the Pepto but decided he wouldn’t mind trying this strategy himself.  What a great show of comradery and friendly competition to share a bottle of Pepto in a bike race/ jalapeno eating competition.

Tour de Jalapeno Rider Shares pepto

The Tour De Jalapeno jersey is an instant classic and riders showing up in this jersey seemed perfectly in place eating jalapenos on a bike ride.

Tour de Jalapeno Rider in Jersey with jalapeno

There were some other jerseys that also seemed appropriate for a bike race with jalapenos such as the flaming skull and crossbones.

Tour de Jalapeno Rider with Jalapeno

The faces on these riders are priceless.  It was a hot morning for a hot ride.  Everyone was having a great time and this was a great ride that Tito’s was proud to be a part of.  The riders who didn’t elect to eat jalapenos as part of the race still enjoyed Tito’s dill pickle brine to ward off cramps on this hot and humid day.  This was a well run event and Tito’s hopes to be a part of it again in the future.

 

Domino’s Banned A Customer Because She Asked For Extra Jalapenos

By    –   Elite Daily

Listen, people. Pizza toppings are sacred and shouldn’t be messed with.

The toppings literally make the pizza, so if there’s one missing or there aren’t enough, the pie could be ruined. And ruined pizza is one thing I cannot forgive.

But, Domino’s decided to ruin pizza for Anneliese Shabbir, a mother of three from Linlithgow, Scotland.

All this pizza lover wanted was extra jalapenos on her pizza, but when she opened the box, a mere seven jalapenos were on the pie.

SEVEN? THAT’S IT? ARE YOU KIDDING, DOMINO’S?

There should be seven jalapenos on each. freaking. slice. And you only put seven on the whole thing? Shame on you.

When Shabbir justifiably expressed her anger and requested extra jalapenos,Domino’s apparently wasn’t happy about it.

So instead of solving her problem, the chain banned her from the branch. Because THAT’S the perfect way to solve your problems.

Her being banned apparently comes at the end of a long line of disappointments on Domino’s end.

Shabbir is actually so used to not getting enough jalapenos on her pizzas that she usually calls Domino’s instead of ordering online to stress the importance of her needs.

She said to MetroUK,

I actually ring them and place an order for collection, rather than use the website, so that I can speak to someone and stress the bit about extra jalapenos. With the most recent pizza there were literally seven jalapenos on the whole pizza. It was pathetic.

Shabbir says she first found her love for jalapenos when she was pregnant with her first child, and now she eats Domino’s four times a week.

That’s dedication if I’ve ever seen it.

And honestly, I get it. Life is way too short not to get the pizza toppings you deserve. When you’re repeatedly let down by your favorite pizza spot, it has to be annoying AF.

Despite Ms. Shabbir’s long-standing relationship with Domino’s, the chain let her down once and for all.

The company sent her a pretty sassy email basically letting her know that if Domino’s couldn’t satisfy her needs, then she should find another pizza parlor that will give her what she wants.

Know the health benefits of eating jalapeno pepper!

Zee Media Bureau

jalapenos 8-8-16

New Delhi: Jalapenos is one of the different types of peppers like cayenne, red and green chilis, bell peppers and a rich source of a compound known as capsaicin. One should include it in their daily diet as it is considered to be good for health.

Here are some health benefits of jalapenos:

Reduces weight

Jalapenos contains capsaicin that helps in boosting metabolism and aiding in weight loss. And many weight loss supplements and pills contain capsaicin. Instead, one should add jalapenos in their diet.

Helps indigestion and stomach ulcers

The capsaicin content in it protects the stomach from harmful bacteria and preventing stomach ulcers. It also helps in digestion and reduces the symptoms of indigestion.

Nasal congestion

Eating jalapenos helps in clearing your airways and reducing the discomfort caused by a blocked nose also known as nasal congestion.

Immune system

Jalapenos are a great source of vitamin C that plays a key role in protecting the immune system.

 

Pickles pair well with back-to-school lesson

  • By Zirconia Alleyne, New Era Features Editor

Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers, and Mrs. Pickle picked some of her favorite pickle recipes to share with students before they head back to school.

Carolyn Haddock, known tenderly as Mrs. Pickle to youngsters, will host Off to School with Mrs. Pickle at 1 p.m. Thursday at the Christian County Literacy Council office.

The program, organized yearly by the Literacy Council, is for students entering kindergarten through third grade. Older or younger siblings are welcome to attend as well.

Haddock and literacy council members not only whip up creative pickle dishes, but Haddock will show her plethora of pickle memorabilia and share stories that encourage students to have a “sweet not sour” school year.

Haddock, a retired teacher and guidance counselor, said this year she especially wants to emphasize sweet pickles and what it means to be sweet to others.

“My focus this year is ‘kindness counts,’” she said. “Considering the world we live in, we could all use a little more kindness, and I want them to have a sweet pickle year.”

Literacy Council Director Beverly Whitfield has been busy editing the council’s “Literally Delicious” cookbook, which features recipes submitted by Community Reader Day volunteers.

Whitfield said a section in the book is called “Mrs. Pickle Prefers Potpourri.” There are several pickle recipes submitted by other pickle-lovers, including the PB&P — peanut butter and pickles sandwich.

“Believe me, youngsters do love pickles and very little is left on the picnic table,” Whitfield exclaimed.

Reach Zirconia Alleyne at 270-887-3243 or zalleyne@kentuckynwera.com.

Domino’s bans woman after being unable to meet extra jalapeños request

A branch of the chain in Scotland said they ‘couldn’t meet the expectations’ of Annelise Shabbir who complained they never gave her enough extra jalapeños on her pizza.

By     –   BT

A woman has been banned from ordering pizza from a Domino’s store after they were unable to “meet her expectations” over her order for extra jalapeños.

Anneliese Shabbir paid more for extra jalapeños on her pizza each time she ordered from the store in Linlithgow, Scotland.

But Ms Shabbir complained that they were not putting enough of the chillis on, she was banned from the store.

The chain stated that she could not be served as the restaurant “could not meet her expectations.”

Ms Shabbir, whose love of jalapenos came during her first pregnancy, told the newspaper: “I actually ring them and place an order for collection, rather than use the website, so that I can speak to someone and stress the bit about extra jalapeños.

“With the most recent pizza there were literally seven jalapeños on the whole pizza. It was pathetic.”

A Domino’s spokesperson said: “Ms Shabbir has been a frequent complainant at the store in question.

“Despite every effort by our store team to satisfy Ms Shabbir, it seemed we were unable to meet her expectations, and so it was suggested that it may be best for both parties if we do not accept any future orders from her.

“We fully support the store’s decision in this case. These decisions are not taken lightly. However, in some limited circumstances, unfortunately, it is our only course of action.”

Special Request: Southern’s Fried Green Tomatoes start with pickling

Q • Can you track down a recipe for me from the Southern restaurant on Olive Street? I’d really like to have the recipe for their deep-fried green tomatoes. They’re amazing! I can’t figure them out. Biting into them it’s like they just came out of a pickle jar, but at the same time they’re hot, right outta the fryer. – David Loeb, Benton Park

A • At Southern, chef Rick Lewis layers flavors into every dish, from his signature Nashville-style hot chicken — in varying degrees of heat — to his Southern-inspired sides, including greens, pickled beets, sorghum baked black-eyed peas, mashed potatoes with pan-fried gravy and more.

Fried green tomatoes, crispy and bright, appear on the starter menu. The lightly pickled green tomatoes, dipped in buttermilk, dredged in a cornmeal coating and fried golden-brown have been a customer favorite at the busy restaurant on Olive Street since the fried chicken spot opened a year ago.

Lewis’ recipe is easy to make at home; it just takes planning to pickle the green tomatoes a day in advance. The preparation and execution couldn’t be simpler. Southern uses a deep fryer, but a pan-fried test on these worked just as well. The coating browns up crisp, and the tangy flavors wake up the taste buds.

“Our food is simple, but we put a lot into it,” Lewis says. He starts with the freshest ingredients and produce, locally sourced; some from his own big home garden. The kitchen makes everything from scratch, including pickled cucumbers and vegetables, breadings, dressings, mustards and more.

Although the restaurant is best known for its hot fried chicken, the fried fish plates and the catfish sandwich provide a tasty alternative. Choose classic sides like the creamy coleslaw, mac and cheese casserole or house-made chips for a taste of the fish fry anytime.

Sandwiches at Southern deserve a good look, too. The Dirty South pairs fried green tomatoes with thick cut bacon and a Southern-style mayo for a different BLT.

The Southern Burger comes with two 50/50 brisket top round beef patties cooked and smashed on the flat top grill topped with the house pimento cheese, pickles and onions. Another sure bet, the Hot Chicken Biscuit, piles hot chicken on a homemade biscuit with sweet pickled green tomatoes and house honey mustard.

For home cooks, a visit to Southern is a reminder of how good simple foods can taste when people take the time and the extra steps to make dishes well.