Tag: spice-blend

  • Chili Test #1: Replacing Cayenne with Home-Dried Jalapeños

    Chili Test #1: Replacing Cayenne with Home-Dried Jalapeños

    I had a hankering to make chili.

    Didn’t have chili powder.
    Didn’t have cayenne.
    Didn’t feel like buying cayenne.

    But I did have a couple jars of dried jalapeños from last summer.

    Dried jalapeños from Grove 2025

    (See: Grew These)

    So instead of grabbing a store blend, I built my usual chili powder…
    and swapped the cayenne for my own ground jalapeños.

    Now… the problem.

    My wife has a very different definition of “medium.”

    Costco salsa? Too spicy.
    She powers through it… but I hear about it.

    History suggests this swap was a risky decision.

    Anyway, here’s what I did:

    Used about 1 1/2 peppers:

    • some with seeds
    • some without

    First I tried using a mortar and pestle to grind them…

    Useless, no thanks, IKEA!

    Then I got fed up and finished it in a busted coffee grinder.

    What? I refuse to throw it out. It’s still good!

    Mixed, it looked rougher than my usual chili powder…

    Flavoured with the jalapeños I grew, dried, and ground myself.

    Which felt like a great idea at the time.

    Result:

    Medium heat.
    Nice warmth, not overpowering.
    Well, at least not for me.

    But the Food Critics’ verdict?

    Okay… yeah. It’s got bite.

    This is what I’m trying to figure out:

    • How much do the seeds actually matter?
    • How does grind size affect it?
    • How does this compare to store-bought chili powder?

    The goal here isn’t just to make chili powder.

    It’s to understand what the peppers I grow actually do in a dish.

    This is the start.

    Next test:

    • Remove jalapeños from the spice mix and cook them whole with the beans.
    • All seeds vs no seeds.
    • Toasted vs not toasted.
    • Maybe bring in some chipotle powder to round it out.