Paprika

Edible Ornamentals Sweet Chilli Sauce

Edible Ornamentals Sweet Chilli Sauce

Edible Ornamentals are commercial growers of chillies, herbs, vegetable and edible flowers, based in the hamlet of Chawston in Bedfordshire. I’ve tried some of their products before at whilst visiting several Chilli Festivals (and liked the taste!) so when I received the sauce in the post for review I was looking forward to tasting it.

As with any chilli product, the review always starts with the eye and looking at the bottle and contents therein. The product labelling is understated and minimalistic in its approach, rather than having decorative graphics or images. Whilst for other this may not work, I feel this approach allows the sauce to grab the attention of the eye and, with the smaller size of the label I’m able to clearly see the contents therein. The sauce is a bright translucent red colour and I can clearly see a generous amount of chilli pieces and some seeds suspended in it.

Ingredients: Sugar, Vinegar, Chillies (7%), garlic, Fresh Ginger, Salt and Paprika.

Bottle kindly provided by Edible Ornamentals

The label indicates that this is a Thai style sauce so given that most Thai sauces invariably use a lot of garlic, I’m not surprised to see this listed as a main ingredient. When moving the bottle, the sauce reacts slowly so it’s clear that this sauce will have a thick, syrup-like consistency. Traditionally, Thai sweet chilli sauces are made with lots of sugar which ensures a syrup -like consistency is achieved through the cooking process. Sauces are cooked until they reduce sufficiently so that any pieces of garlic or chillies added are easily suspended within it. It’s pleasing therefore to see then that this consistency has been achieved with no thickeners being listed as an ingredients – a positive mark in my books for Edible Ornamental’s working to achieve a more authentic sauce.

Just how much of a key ingredient garlic is in this sauce, is abundantly clear as I open the bottle and inhale. A rich roasted garlic aroma hits me, which as a lover of garlic gets my taste buds salivating in anticipation. Although quite viscous the sauce pours readily onto my spoon and as I raise the spoon to my mouth, the garlic aroma becomes even more intense.

Given the amount of sugars involved in achieving this syrupy consistency I’m expecting a big hit of sweetness but, whilst there’s an apparent immediate sweet hit on my taste buds as I taste it, it’s not as overly sweet like other sweet chillies sauces I’ve tasted before. Instead, the sweetness is quickly countered & abated by the natural sourness of the vinegar used and then the taste balances begins to shift towards a roasted garlic flavour. This flavour in itself is quite sweet by differently so from that of the sugar.

I can feel the pieces of chilli and seeds moving around my mouth, which give the sauce some texture and bite, and in parallel to experiencing a sustained garlic flavour I begin to feel the affect of the chillies building in my mouth. Although not detailed in the ingredients I’ve been advised that the chillies used in this sauce are Serenades, a hot variety which allows the sauce to have a moderate chilli kick. It’s not an extreme heat (the label rates this as a 2 out of 5 for heat) but nonetheless it’s a much more satisfactory heat level compared other sweet chilli sauces that I‘ve tasted.

The label says this sauce is perfect for Oriental dishes and I’d have to agree. Whether it be used as a ‘nam chim’ (dipping sauce) with some ‘Kanom Jeeb’ (Thai equivalent of Dim Sum) or ‘Tod Man Pla’ (Spicy Fish Cakes) or even added last minute to some stir fried noodles, this is definitely among the better sweet chilli sauces I’ve seen available and well worth checking out.

Available from the Edible Ornamentals website for £3.75 for the larger 150ml / 200g size bottle or £2.75 for the smaller 110g jar.

Flavour
(7/10)
Heat
(5/10)
Packaging
(6/10)
Value
(7/10)
Overall
(7/10)

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Chinthe Burmese Curry

Chinthe Burmese Curry

Winter warming Burmese curry paste goes down a treat.

Hands up who wants to try some Burmese curry paste? I DO!!!! Luckily for me I have a jar from the guys at Chinthe based in London. Saying that, I swiftly changed my mind when I saw what was inside the jar. It looked like my son had tipped in a load of red glitter into the jar. It glistened intensely and I could not believe that this is actually for consumption. Bright fiery red that would shimmer and shine all day long. It was only when I took the lid of to have a smell that I realised that this is actually the proper curry paste, if this tastes as good as it looks then rock on! The look was just so deceptive you have to see it to believe.

The label on the jar has a very oriental style and feel to it. Large yellow label with bold black lettering on. Not the most of eye catching labels but when you have a sauce that shines brighter than floodlights at the world cup, who cares.

Smelling the paste I don’t get a great deal, mainly Paprika and onion. The smell is extremely mild. On closer inspection its clear to see that a lot of fresh spices have gone into this and not just a load of powdered ingredients like you can find down the supermarket. Very oily in texture on the surface, but when you dig in with a spoon it’s fairly solid and takes a bit of digging to get it out.

Ingredients: Vegetable Oil, Paprika, Chilli, Onion, Ginger, Fish Sauce (Fish Extract, Water), Garlic, Spices.

Jar kindly provided by chinthe.com

Nothing over the top in this list of ingredients, so on with the cooking. 2 Table spoons per 500g of meat or vegetables, cover with water, and cook. Simple.

Just finished in the kitchen at the smell of this sauce amplifies greatly when cooking. The onion and garlic and thrown into the air and sent soaring around the house making a glorious aroma. Time for the taste test.

Mass infusion straight away of the Chilli, onion and ginger swamping every part of my mouth. The spices are powerful and yet mild, all of which make an amazing taste. The heat is nice, not blistering but enjoyable. The real beauty is the longer you cook this the thicker it gets and the flavours amplify so you can play around and get the right taste and texture for you. The heat lingers for quite a long time and brings home a lovely warm feeling with a slight kick in its tail. The blend of spices compliments this heat in a beautiful way and as for the colour????? Well, I swear there is some glitter in it, it still glistens on the plate. Amazing.

This can be snapped up from chinthe.com and for a 270g jar (Good for about 3 curries, is a crazy £2.79. Go to the site and take a look, couldn’t believe it myself. So if you get snowed in this winter, be sure you have a jar of this ‘glitter’ with you.

Remember, if it burns going in, It will burn coming out!

Flavour
(8/10)
Heat
(5/10)
Packaging
(6/10)
Value
(9.5/10)
Overall
(8/10)

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Sainsburys Peri Peri Sauce

Sainsburys Peri Peri Sauce

Peri-Peri or Piri Piri is Swahili for “pepper-pepper” and is name commonly used for the African Bird’s Eye chilli. It seems to be a style of chilli sauce that has become more mainstream probably in part due to the success of Nando’s restaurants in the UK. This being a Sainsburys own-brand sauce I have to admit I was somewhat sceptical about how good this sauce in comparison to the many other specialist chilli sauces I’ve tried – certainly I figured that it wouldn’t be a hot experience.

The labelling is quite minimalist in approach with a graphic of some chillies on the front of the bottle and Sainsbury’s traffic light health labelling on the front (which advises me that there’s a high salt content in this product). The sauce is also marked as being suitable for vegans.

Ingredients: Water, spices (salt, Dried Mixed pepper, Onion Powder, Rice Flour, Lemon Juice Powder, Paprika, Cayenne Pepper, Chilli Powder, Garlic Powder, Colour: Paprika Extract; Natural Flavouring), Onion, Lemon Puree, Spirit Vinegar, Green Chilli Puree (5%), Rapeseed Oil, Concentrated Lemon Juice, Stabiliser: Xantham Gum; Salt.

Opening the bottle and smelling the sauce I initially got quite a sharp hit of vinegar and then a combination of citrus lemon & garlic tones. The sauce is a rich orange / brown colour and pours easily from the bottle, leaning towards being more runny than thick. Tasting the sauce I found I got quite a strong citrus hit (more than I expected) and whilst I could detect other ingredients such as the garlic powder and onion, I found the flavours not well balanced. The lemon flavour is too dominant and over powering and results in sharp aftertaste.

With regards to heat, whilst the ‘3 chilli’ rating on the label implies it has some kind of heat, this isn’t going to do anything for chilli head. There’s a hint of warmth which builds somewhat as more is consumed but that’s about it. This product is squarely aimed at the ‘Joe Average’ masses and so would probably be a medium hot for them.

Whilst at only £1.19 it’s certainly inexpensive overall I found my supermarket brand scepticism was well served. I think this sauce is trying to be a clone of the Nando’s Peri Peri style sauces but alas it’s a poor imitation of them and hits well off the mark.

Flavour
(3/10)
Heat
(2/10)
Packaging
(3/10)
Value
(5/10)
Overall
(3/10)

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I wrote this recipe down originally for a book, published many years ago “The Hot Book of Chillies“. I am not sure I have ever made it the same way twice, but a few weeks ago I came across a jar from the batch I made back then, and wow does it taste good. I cannot recommend you keep yours so long, this jar dates back to 2005, but it just shows how well things mature.

Lemon 'n Lime Fire Chutney

Yield: About 1.5L (3 Pints of Chutney)

Ingredients

  • 6 Limes
  • 2 Large Lemons
  • 500 g Onions
  • 50 g Salt
  • 500 g Sugar
  • 700 ml Vinegar
  • 2 tsp Mustard Seeds
  • 2 tsp Paprika
  • 2 tsp Ground Cumin
  • 1 tsp Ground Turmeric
  • 10 Hot Thai Chillies (finely chopped)
  • 200 g Raisins

Cooking Directions

  1. Place the Limes and Lemons in a pan and cover with water. Bring to the boil and simmer for 2-3 minutes, then leave to stand until cool enough to handle.
  2. Cut the fruit into halves and squeeze the juice into a bowl, removing the seeds.
  3. Chop the remaining skin and pulp onto small pieces with scissors or a sharp knife, mix in the onions ans sprinkle with salt.
  4. In a latge pan bring the vinegar and sugar to the boil and simmer until all the sugar has dissolved. Add the chopped lime, lemon and onion mixture as well as all the dry spices, raisins and chillies, mix well and simmer for 2-3 hours stirring frequently until the mixture has reduced by about 50%.
  5. Pour into sterilized jars and seal while still hot.
  6. Your chutney will be ready to eat within 3-4 weeks.

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