Search 1000s of Fact Sheets
Gardens
Pets
Lifestyle

Keywords

Subcategory

Keywords

Exact matches only

Subcategory

Keywords

Exact matches only

Subcategory

Quick Poll

When you strike pest problems in your garden, do you use

Any effective spray – not fussy about organic
Only organic sprays
No sprays whatsoever

ADVERTISEMENT.
In the Magazine

Chilli Jam - The French Alternative

Food, Health & Nutrition

Chilli Jam - The French Alternative

According to Jackie French, the Incas used chilli sauce to torture their captives, but that was before they realised how good it tasted!

Jackie used bell or lantern peppers (Capsicum chinense) to make chilli jam, a spicy paste often used in Thai recipes, salads, on crackers or with cheese. You can use any kind of chilli for this recipe. However, if you don't want really hot chilli jam, substitute red capsicum for some of the chilli.

Ingredients

1 cup bland oil, such as peanut or safflower 1 whole bulb of garlic, peeled and chopped 2 onions, roughly chopped 2 cups fresh chillies, deseeded and tops removed (or red capsicum) 3 tablespoons palm sugar (or brown sugar) 2 tablespoons tamarind paste (or dried tamarind, soaked until it softens) 2-3 tablespoons fish sauce

Method

Heat the oil in a frying pan. Add the garlic and onion and cook for about 5 minutes. Add the chilli (or capsicum) and cook until soft.Add the palm sugar, tamarind paste and the fish sauce. Simmer for 5-10 minutes, then turn off the heat.Scrape the mixture into a blender, and blend until the lumps disappear and the consistency is jam-like.Pour the chilli jam into sterilised jars and store in the fridge for up to 1 month.

Jackie's safety tip:

If you'd rather not find out why the Incas used chilli sauce to torture their captives, wear rubber gloves when making chilli jam, and be sure to wash your hands thoroughly before touching your eyes or nostrils!

Further information

Palm sugar is used in Thai recipes as a natural sweetener. It is harvested from sap that drips from the cut flower buds of the sugar palm.  Palm sugar and tamarind paste are available from most major supermarket chains.

Copyright 2002 CTC Productions

Disclaimer:  Burke's Backyard and Backyard Blitz do not accept payment to promote products. All recommendations are genuine. Details on the fact sheets are accurate at the time of publishing, however prices and contact information are not updated and may change.

Members

JOIN NOW

Members

It's free! Sign up now to
join our forums, get
special offers, enter
competitions and bonus
articles

View all forums
ADVERTISEMENT
The Message Board

Get help, share your knowledge

1638 posts
568 users
964 posts
317 users
461 posts
240 users
518 posts
205 users
170 posts
96 users

View all forums

Members
Homegrown
Home Grown
Gardening and cooking for good health and
great taste.
buy now
Indigenous
Indigenous
Don Burke's story, his own stunnning native garden, plus expert advice and tips
buy now
 
 

DVDS

Sit back and travel the world with Don and get to know the locals, too.

buy now

  DVDs
© 2007-2008 CTC Productions, All Rights Reserved
Home | Message Board | Fact Sheets | Members | Magazine | Subscriptions | CTC Facilities | About Us | Privacy Policy | Contact Us