duh... I knew that!! especially after being hit in the head that many times.... by myself! LOL
thanks bliss, don't know where my head was/is.
thanks bliss, don't know where my head was/is.
But that doesn't tell you how much fresh pepper went into making those amounts of peppers minus the seeds, pith, and skin. That's what I would want to know.duh... I knew that!! especially after being hit in the head that many times.... by myself! LOL
thanks bliss, don't know where my head was/is.
You're right. Guesstimating for this recipe is fine.taxy, I think with reading the recipe you can make an educated guess. So although some 'poetic license' could probably have been taken with the photographs, one can make some educated guesses.
A large jar of roasted red peppers (at least the one I buy) contains about 5, often more, whole peppers. This corresponds to the picture in the recipe of the peppers they roasted.
So I think bliss is correct with her assumptions as to the jar sizes.
This is also not a baking project where precise weights and measures usually need to be more specific. The recipe only contains some salt, lemon juice and oil, a couple of grams/ounces one way or the other is easily adjusted for your own specific tastes.
On the other hand, should you open the jar of roasted peppers and find 10 huge peppers, I think common sense would tell you that perhaps that is a bit more than the recipe suggests.
The recipe also does not tell you how many peppers went into the recipe, nor how much that 2 kg is for... raw peppers, unroasted with skin, pith and seeds? or 2 kg for roasted, peeled, pith and seeds removed?
Yes, that's the one. See, I think that the jarred peppers don't usually have seeds and pith, so they would weigh less that the equivalent peppers that were intact. It won't make a difference to cooking them, but the weight ratio of whole peppers to resulting paste won't be 10:3. I will guess more like 8:3 starting with peppers that already have seeds and pith removed. But, all that does is change the amount you get. I doubt it will make a huge difference.Are you @dragnlaw @taxlady talking about @larry_stewart 's recipe for pepper paste? This one. https://theveganplanetkitchen.com/sweet-red-pepper-paste-biber-salcasi/
I would assume that 1 kg peppers to be roasted, are raw fresh, but a can of peppers that is 1 kg will do if you need to use them instead.
Under 'Servings', it doesn't list a number of servings, it says 300 ml. That is about 10 ounces. To me-that is the outcome of the recipe, the recipe size at the end.
So I'd assume after charring the peel, removing it, cutting it open, removing veins and seeds, taking off the tops, you lose a portion of the weight. Maybe as much as a 1/4th. Then you cook it for 30 minutes to lose moisture, bringing it down to 300 ml or 10 ounces.
If you are talking about some other recipe then I don't know.
I don't remember either. But my feeling is that the jpith and seeds are removed. I know that the top are gone.You're right. Guesstimating for this recipe is fine.
I use roasted peppers in a jar too. I'm trying to remember if there is usually pith and seeds inside of those or is it something that only happens once in a while. Do you remember?
That's an excellent idea, finishing off the jar immediately that it's opened. Here's something else to make with roasted red peppers:I don't remember either. But my feeling is that the jpith and seeds are removed. I know that the top are gone.
Actually that's given me an idea. I often don't know what to do with the rest of a jar once opened. They spoil extremely fast. But the last jar I had I made the balance into a pasta sauce. Not terribly impressed with it but still OK and at least it didn't have time to get moldy.
In future I will probably either blend them down and/or freeze flat.
Also must remembre to look and see if they are actually whole without a split down one side. Wondering if I could actually stuff them with.... something?