Preserving Peppers

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how to preserve red peppers
Photo by Holly A. Heyser

Consider, for a moment, the sweet pepper. No other plant demands so much, gives so little, yet keeps us coming back for more.

Sweet peppers are the coquettes of my garden. I coddle them, dote on their every need, and in return they toss me a few fruits to play with — so few, in fact, that I can barely bring myself to eat them fresh. I preserve almost every one the little minxes give me to eat huddled, alone, in the dead of winter. Or something like that.

Every year I say, “I need to plant more sweet peppers.” Every year I plant a few more. It’s never enough. I could lay waste to everything else in my garden and plant only an array of red bells, piquillos, padrons, pimientos and sweet cherry bombs — and still it would not be enough. It is not possible to have too many sweet peppers; chiles yes, but not sweet peppers.

What’s more, after these princesses deign to drop me a pepper or three, it has become so late in the season that they die soon afterward, our relationship barely consummated. It reminds me of some character in an Edith Wharton novel (and yes, I’ve read several. Blame my mother for that one…)

Disconsolate, I used to count the days until February, when I could start a new set of seeds under hot lights inside; even in birth, sweet peppers need to be the center of attention.

But then, one day, I found a way to cheat death.Yes, it is as simple as a heavy pot, a warm climate, and a quirk of biology.

A green plant in a garden
Photo by Holly A, Heyser

I live in Northern California, and in my little spot of land, we get a hard frost only once every few years. Light frosts, which are enough to kill a pepper, come no more than a couple dozen times a year in my garden. But in the front of my house, which faces south, those light frosts come less than a dozen times a year, and even in the dead of winter the highs soar past 50 degrees — warm enough to keep a pepper alive.

But aren’t peppers annuals? No. And that is a dirty secret perpetrated by seed dealers everywhere. The coquettes aren’t eager to die after all, it seems. Only cold kills them. What they want is an even deeper commitment from you the gardener before they willingly give up their fruit. I once had a Thai chile — a capiscum frutescens, for you pepper freaks out there — that lived five years. My rocoto peppers are two years old and going strong. Peppers, like most of us, want a long-term relationship.

So I dig up my peppers from the garden every October, pot them up and move them to the front yard, which is such a blast furnace in summer — routinely reaching 110 degrees — that it would burn most peppers; that’s why I don’t keep them in the front all year long.It works for me. And it would work for anyone who has a sunny window. My Thai chile lasted in Minnesota until one day even the inner windowsill dropped below 30 degrees. (Outside it was -19 degrees, -30 with the wind.) So it can be done.

Once spring returns, you will find your peppers strong and ready to flower early and grow large. And mature peppers bear more fruit.

What to do with that fruit? Well, I’d venture to guess that everyone reading this has a favorite pepper recipe. I have lots on this site. But I also preserve a lot of peppers, less out of fear now than because preserved peppers take on a character totally unlike fresh ones.

My main method is to roast the peppers over an open fire, then preserve them with a little salt, vinegar and oil. Peppers lack natural acid, so need to be pressure-canned if you aren’t using vinegar or salt. I don’t do much pressure-canning, so I use a hybrid pickle method that works well for me.

preserved roasted peppers
Photo by Holly A. Heyser

This way of preserving does a number of things. Roasting kills any enzymes in the peppers that might deteriorate them over time, as well as softening and sweetening the peppers — not to mention getting rid of the indigestible skins. I then dredge the peppers in vinegar to up the acid level and give the peppers more tang. After that I salt them liberally to make things even more stable; salt also adds to the flavor. And finally I cover everything in olive oil to keep air out. Some tips:

  • Dry the peppers after washing them, and oil them lightly before grilling or roasting under the broiler.
  • Grill them hard, as in blackened. Very few peppers have the thick skin a pimiento does (pimientos are bred to be roasted and peeled, so they have unusually thick skins), and a thin skin can be a bear to peel off unless it is good and charred.
  • Steam the roasted peppers for a long time, in a paper bag. Don’t use plastic, as it will often melt. And you can wait on this step for up to an hour or so. Nothing quite so fun as to be scalded with nuclear-hot pepper juice when you’re trying to peel them.
  • Don’t wash the peppers once peeled. You want all that pepper juice you can collect, and running the peppers under water will rob you of that. This is the secret to really, really good roasted peppers.

Another preserved pepper preparation (say that one five times fast!) I often do is make sauces. One of my favorites is a variant on a Hungarian sauce I once bought solely for the color: shocking, neon red. A classic “shiny things!” moment. Basically this sauce is made from roasted gypsy peppers, which are both hot and sweet at the same time, pureed with white wine vinegar, salt and a little olive oil.

gypsy pepper coulis
Photo by Hank Shaw

Again, the vinegar, salt and oil are what preserves this sauce, which I have kept in the fridge for a year. The only pain is peeling gypsy peppers, which are both thin-skinned and thin-walled, unlike the thick-walled bell peppers we’re used to. A small price to pay.

I use this coulis, which is what the French would call it, as an ingredient in other sauces — particularly a Spanish, pepper-based dish called chilindron — as well as with fish or pheasant. You could use chicken. I find it marries better with light meats, not red meat like venison or beef.

For most of you it is not too late to rescue your peppers. Those of you in colder climates may be forced to choose which pepper’s charms most attract you, as you may not have space to save everyone. And don’t be worried about the pepper dropping leaves in winter; it happens. Just keep it in a sunny spot, protect it from whiteflies, and keep it as warm as you can. It will repay you for your kindnesses next year.

A pile of fresh fruits and vegetables
Photo by Hank Shaw

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 [recipe_name]PRESERVED ROASTED RED PEPPERS[/recipe_name]

[summary]There are a lot of ways to preserve red peppers. You can pickle them, which is nice, but a little limiting; pickled sweet peppers are good for an appetizer, but little else. Once you roast the peppers, however, things change.

Roasted peppers are a delight. I use them as appetizers like the pickled peppers, but also in sauces, stews and simply draped over roasted or grilled meat. Roasting — especially over an open flame — sweetens and softens the pepper, and more importantly, allows you to be rid of the indigestible skin.

Yes, you can pickle the roasted red peppers, too, but I’ve developed a method inspired by an obscure English book by Nora Carey called Perfect Preserves. Carey uses a hybrid pickling, sott’olio method to keep her peppers delicious through her British winters. I’ve adapted it a little to reflect the hotter California climate.[/summary]

[yield]Makes about 2 pints.[/yield]

Prep Time:[preptime time=35M] 35 minutes[/preptime]

Cook Time:[cooktime time=45M] 45 minutes[/cooktime]

  • [ingredient] [amount]8[/amount] [item]red peppers[/item], or really any colored peppers [/ingredient]
  • [ingredient] [amount]2 tablespoons[/amount] [item]olive oil[/item] [/ingredient]
  • [ingredient] [amount]1 cup[/amount] [item]vinegar[/item] (any kind) [/ingredient]
  • Kosher salt
  • Canning jars
  • A chopstick or butter knife

[instructions]

  1. First wash, dry and then lightly oil your sweet peppers. You can do this with hot peppers, too, but be sure to use thick-walled varieties such as jalapenos.
  2. Roast your peppers. Ideally this is over a smoky wood fire, on a grill. Second choice is a gas grill, third an open burner on a stove. Alternatively, arrange your peppers on a broiling pan and broil them. No matter what your heating method, you will need to turn your peppers from time to time as the skins char and blacken.
  3. When the peppers are mostly blackened, remove them to a paper grocery bag and roll up the bag to seal in the steam. You want to steam the peppers in their own juices. Let the bag sit for 20-40 minutes.
  4. After the peppers have cooled and steamed, take them out one at a time and remove the skins, stems and seeds. Have a little water running in the sink so you can wash your hands off periodically. Do NOT run the peppers under the water, as this robs them of flavor. Once each pepper is cleaned — get as many seeds out as you can — drop it in a bowl. Do all the peppers before proceeding.
  5. Once all the peppers are cleaned and in the bowl, get a shallow bowl or small casserole pan and pour in some vinegar. I use red wine, cider or sherry vinegar for red peppers (sherry when I want them to be Spanish, cider for Portuguese, red wine for Italian or Greek) and white wine for green peppers.
  6. Dredge each pepper through the vinegar a few times to get it good and coated. Place it in another bowl. Do this for all the peppers.
  7. Sprinkle the bowl with all the peppers with kosher salt. Gently mix the peppers together like a salad. Sprinkle a little more salt and repeat. Sprinkle a little salt into the bowl with the pepper juice — the original bowl.
  8. Gather canning jars and pour a little vinegar into each one; enough to cover the bottom of the jar. Pack in the peppers, leaving about 1/2 space at the top. Use a butter knife or chopstick to run down the sides of the jars, releasing air bubbles. You will notice the level of liquid drop. Fill it with the salted pepper juice — but still leave room at the top of the jar.
  9. Once the air is out to the best of your ability and the vinegar-pepper juice it right at the top of the level of the peppers, pour in olive oil on top of everything to a depth of 1/4 inch. Screw the lids on the jars and you’re done. No sealing needed. These peppers will last a year in the refrigerator, although they will soften over time.

[/instructions]

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About Hank Shaw

Hey there. Welcome to Hunter Angler Gardener Cook, the internet’s largest source of recipes and know-how for wild foods. I am a chef, author, and yes, hunter, angler, gardener, forager and cook. Follow me on Instagram and on Facebook.

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55 Comments

  1. Denise: You’re right, I did not make that clear. I’ve rewritten the recipe to clarify. For the record, I’ve eaten the fermented peppers before and they were pretty good — weird, strong-tasting, but good. Next season I will try to pressure can them. That ought to keep the peppers shelf-stable.

  2. I did toss them, I didn’t get out of the directions to keep them in the fridge…it looked to me like they only needed to be refrigerated after you opened a jar and broke the oil seal…. 🙁 At least I know for next year….

  3. Denise: Sounds like you are keeping them at room temperature – I keep mine in the fridge. It also sounds like there was not enough salt and/or acid on the peppers to stop microbial activity. They are fermenting. I’d toss them.

  4. Hi! I used this recipe with the surplus of peppers Fromm my garden this year, and the one jar I ate with a few days was so delicious. That was about 2 weeks ago and all the other jars are bubbling and filling with air and pressure, and when I open them they pop like they are fermenting. It seemed I had gotten all the air out and covered them with over 1/4 inch of oil. What may I have done wrong?
    Thanks!

  5. Hank, do you have a suggestion for preserving red hot banana peppers? (Chill Out™ Chilies are a variety of the species C. annuum called ‘Hot Banana.’)

    I plan to make a pepper jelly, but I would like to preserve some peppers for future use in other recipes. Pickling some would be fine too.

    Thanks,
    Jennifer

  6. Hello,I have finally found you,I have spent 3 days trying to find this recipe on the net. I want to do these roasted peppers and I am ready to start but I need to know if when all is done can the jars be stored in a pantry and if not how long before they have to go to the freezer. I am thinking of bringing some jars to friends on our way to Florida and keeping some with us in the Car on our way to Florida from Ontario and will be on the road for 7days. Thank you

  7. I have been preserving fresh hot peppers in just plain oil and a little bit of vinegar for a long long time. Just wash, dry and place peppers in a glass jar (best foods jar works too) and let it sit in the pantry.

    It pretty much lasts FOREVER. I have a jar of this tiny hot peppers from Brazil in oil (not in the fridge) for about 14 years. We use the “super hot oil” on top of rice and beans and when we run out of oil, we add some more oil.

    Last year I sliced jalapenos and placed then in oil and they did lose their heat. But the oil is VERY flavorful and I put on quesadillas.

  8. Have just put up some of these (have yet to taste). However, I must say that your writing alone is worth this post – truly poetic and eloquent. Thank you.

  9. No offense but I preserved 1/2 my roasted sweet peppers in olive oil (only) and 1/2 in this mix and the peppers w/ vinegar come out like a pickled side dish vs. the main event they actually are, which I think oil protects and enhances. We had to drain ours, wash, brine in salt water, and then re-oil the original vinegar set peppers…juts too much of “another pickled item” type of flavor for something that is so exquisite and massive as roasted sweet peppers are.

    However – it may be that un-roasted fresh peppers would be better served w/ this method…I don’t know. Just chiming in.

  10. Sylvia: Not sure why you had some jars not seal. But it is not because you got all the air bubbles out, that’s for sure. Even the slightest bit of oil or pepper left on the jar lid can break the seal, however. My advice is to keep these jars in the fridge and eat them first.

    Teresa: Yes, it will work with green peppers. I am doing it with yellow ones, too.

  11. Hank, thank you for a fantastic recipe. I made two batches yesterday. I opened one jar to taste it, since it was my first try pickling peppers, gave my husband a little bite and pretty much ate the rest on the spot. The mix of olive oil and red wine vinegar, which I used to make it Italian/Greek, was just perfect.
    Question. This was the first time in my short canning experience that some jars didn’t seal properly. Two out of 8, no big deal, more peppers for me today, but just out of curiosity, would not letting all the air bubbles out have something to do with it? I can’t think of anything else.

  12. Thank you for the great chile tips. I’m a California expatriot living in WI so I have had to get pretty creative in order to have my sweet and hot peppers for salsas etc. I grow sweet frying/roasting peppers for red pepper relish, Anaheim and Serrano peppers for red and green salsas.
    I just picked my first round of sweet roasting peppers today. Most gardens back here are just getting the plants in the ground.
    I use a “cold climate” growing method I have been experimenting with for 3 years. I grow the peppers in the black plastic tubs used for mixing concrete and plaster. The roots spread out over the shallow tub, the black color retains the heat and the peppers go crazy! At the peak of the season, I will be picking a grocery bag full of peppers off of each tray which holds 6-8 plants every week.
    This year, I am going to bring some of the peppers inside to try to winter them over.

  13. Judi: No, that will not work. You need to cook the peppers to preserve them this way. If you want to leave them uncooked, you need to pickle them either with vinegar or in a brine.

  14. I have sliced long seet red peppers, and banana peppers, I thought to preserve them I would put oil in the jars, and keep in the refirgator to use in salads. Is this a possibility?
    Thanks for any help
    Judi

  15. Thank you! Three days ago i found 8 lbs of mini sweet peppers in the dumpster at my local grocery store. There were only 9 bad peppers in the 4 bags! i had just purchased one of the 2-lb bags a couple of days earlier at the same store. i’ve used them in meals for the last few days but i still have more than i can possibly eat before they go bad. i’m not really a big fan of pickled peppers and wanted to do something wonderful with them to preserve them. Of course, roasting and skinning all those little suckers is going to be challenging and time consuming, but they won’t go to waste!

  16. We love hot peppers back here in the Philippines.
    Meals are incomplete if we won’t have some to spice it up. Really appetizing!

    The problem is due to many typhoons, they are hard to buy from the market and get really expensive all the time.
    But when we have the chance to buy many they won’t even last for more than a week, so I tried googling on how to preserve.

    And so, I came I across your blog and got more than what I’m looking for.
    Now, I’m planning to plant some red peppers in the backyard and wanting to try your tips. They seems so sweet and delicious.
    Am also planning to prepare more and start a small business from it.
    I’ll let some of my friends and neighbors to know if they’ll like it and when they do,I’ll start selling in our flea market happening weekly.

    Thank you so much for such a great idea!

    More power to your blog!

  17. Bonjour, great recipe!
    Could I add whole garlic cloves and a little hot pepper to spicy the whole thing?
    Also, do you recommend a few herb/leaf? or would you add those when using the peppers?
    thanks for your web site, I just did 2 jars of mustard. It is going to be much cheaper than the store one and I will not have to read the label for additives like sulfites (except if I use wine in the recipe).
    Have a great day!
    (Montréal, Qc, Canada)

  18. I planted a flat of Hungarian wax pepper seedlings this year, I have never grown vegetables before, just hay. The place they were planted was formerly horse pasture for 35 years, rich and organic soil. All I did was water and weed them once in a while. They all lived, and each plant has 30 to 40 huge glossy peppers on it. Alas, they are hotter than I expected, neither my husband nor I can eat them, so I have about 400 peppers that I’ll probably have to plow under for green manure. A pity, as they are so beautiful, but nobody wants them. Barbara ( Michigan)