I'm trying out some different recipes for Christmas gifts. I'm kind of shooting myself in the foot if I go into too much detail b/c i don't want everyone to know what they are getting from me for Christmas, so let's just say I'm seeing what's good and how much of the good stuff certain recipes make. Yes, I'm already thinking about Christmas presents, but when you don't plan on buying stuff for people and instead are making their presents, you kind of have to plan ahead.
So with that said, today I made Hot Pepper Jelly. What on earth do I do with Hot Pepper Jelly, you may ask yourself? Well personally I dump the jar onto a big ole' hunk of cream cheese and dig in with some crackers. It's an EXCELLENT appetizer and super easy to do...especially if someone else gives you the jelly. lol
The recipe I'm using comes from the St. Michael's and All Angels Cookbook. This was the parish I grew up in located just outside Stone Mountain Village and right down the street from my elementary school. The recipe comes from a lady named, Cynthia Sutton and while I don't know who she is, Mom said she had wonderful recipes and that she was sure this one was equally as good. If memory serves, she said something along the lines of "Ooh its a Cynthia Sutton recipe!" :)
Ok enough rambling, onto the good stuff.
First off: your canning jars. You will need 5 8oz. jars. Wash them and then put into a hot water bath. I usually fill the jars with some water so that they won't float.
Bring the water to a boil while making the actual jelly. They will be nice and hot by the time the jelly is ready to be put into them.
Take 1 large bell pepper (any color will do, but I used green b/c i'm poor and they are cheap.), cut the top off, remove the seeds and quarter. You want the actual quantity of bell pepper to equal 1 1/2 cups. Toss into the food processor or blender.
Next, take your jalapenos (fresh from my garden or your's or your grocery store), chop off the tops, slice in half length-wise, remove the seeds and measure out a 1/2 cup (add more or less for varying degrees of heat) and add to the bell pepper in the food processor.
Grind up the peppers until they look like this:
Transfer the pepper mixture (juices and all) into a large pot and then add 6 1/2 cups of sugar, a pinch of salt and 1 1/2 cups of white distilled vinegar.
Stir the mixture well, bring to a brisk boil and then boil for 3 minutes. DO NOT WALK AWAY FROM THE STOVE WHILE THIS IS GOING ON! I made the mistake of leaving to do a tiny bit of vacuuming, only to return to it boiling over and it smelling oddly-enough like burnt marshmallows. (Burnt sugar is burnt sugar, yes?) This is also why they are no pictures of the mixture boiling...priorities.
After the mixture boils for 3 minutes (hopefully, without incident...) Now this is where I got confused a little and I'm hoping it doesn't effect my end product. The recipe calls for "1 bottle of Certo", which I found when I Wally World, but it was SUPER pricey ($6.00+ for a 2 pack) compared to a big packet of instant fruit pectin (97 cents). So I read both packages and came to the conclusion that one bottle and one packet made the same amount of end product and I went with the packet. (I had a tiny bit leftover after filling the jars and I put it into a clean jar without a lid, just so I could taste it after it firmed up. It seems to firming just fine - so I'm guessing everything went correctly with the fruit pectin .)
***UPDATE***
Monday, Aug 22
I'm now under the impression that the one packet of fruit pectin wasn't enough. After sitting out for several hours to cool and firm, the jelly was still rather fluid, so i'm not going to cheap out next time, and i'll be buying the actual Certo. Oh well, live and learn right?!
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So add the bottle of Certo and continue to boil for one more minute.
Remove the pot from heat and let sit for 5 minutes.
Your jelly jars should be nice and hot now. Use tongs to remove one from the water and then use a baster or ladle to put the liquid jelly into the jar. Next screw on the lid and set aside. Continue this until all the jars are filled and lidded.
If you want the jelly to be more of that neon green color, I would add some green food coloring or food gel to the jelly after removing it from the heat, but i'm fine with the natural color.
The jelly is still cooling in its jars so I haven't tried it yet, which I guess isn't a very good thing to do. I probably should have waited to try it before I went and posted about it - but nothing ventured nothing gained. I have FAITH that it will be tasty and if it isn't... well I'll have some ideas that might make it that way.
Fingers Crossed!!
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Hot Pepper Jelly
by: Cynthia Sutton
yields: 5 8oz. jars.
5 8oz. Bell jars
1 1/2 cups bell pepper (any color)
1/2 cup of jalapenos (fresh)
6 1/2 cups of sugar
1 1/2 cups of white distilled vinegar
1 bottle of Certo or one packet of instant fruit pectin (should say on the package that it's good for 5 8oz. servings)
pinch of salt
Grind peppers in blender or food processor. Mix peppers, sugar, salt and vinegar into a large pot. Bring to a brisk boil. Boil for 3 minutes. Add Certo/Fruit Pectin and boil for an additional minute.
Remove from heat and let stand for 5 minutes. Pour into hot, sterilized jars and seal.
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