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FireTalkers: Dave DeWitt on His New Book, The Complete Chile Pepper Book

The Complete Chile Pepper Book by Dave DeWitt and Dr. Paul W. BoslandThe last time I interviewed Dave DeWitt for this site, the focus of the questions and answers was to help dispel some of the annoying myths about chile peppers and hot sauces that continue to float around in popular culture.

This time out, it’s to talk about his latest literary excursion, The Complete Chile Pepper Book: A Gardener’s Guide to Choosing, Growing, Preserving, and Cooking, which he co-authored with a longtime colleague and fellow chile expert, Dr. Paul Bosland of the Chile Pepper Institute. Dave has penned over 35 books during his storied career, most of which have covered spicy foods and the culinary arts. I happen to think that The Complete Chile Pepper Book is not only Dave’s best, but also the most comprehensive tome ever written on the subject of genus capsicum. I purchased my copy back in September, and there’s hardly a week that goes by that I don’t open it up and refer to it for one reason or another. One needn’t even be a gardener or a hardcore spicy food cook to benefit from the book; there’s enough great information from this book that would interest even fair-weather pepper fans.

The Complete Chile Pepper Book is available from Amazon, and is a beautifully-photographed, full-color, hardcover edition that makes a must-have Christmas gift both for you or the chilehead in your life.

Scott: Everyone in the chile world knows of you and your expertise in all things spicy, but how did you first get into fiery foods?

Dave: After I moved to New Mexico in late 1974, I vowed to start my freelance writing career and starting writing articles on New Mexico food and travel, which led me directly to chiles. I discovered that there was not much available research on the subject, so I went to libraries all over the state and photocopied the librarians’ files.

Christmas Gifts For Hot Sauce Lovers

Chile Pepper Christmas Tree LightsI’ve gotten e-mails, as well as Twitter and Facebook messages from people wondering what the best sauces and gifts to give to heat freaks are. First of all, I would urge everyone to act quickly! It’s only days before the various shipping deadlines occur, so remember time is of the essence.

I’ve previously compiled a short list of great multi-bottle hot sauce packages for the Hot Sauce Weekly podcast here. Be sure to take a listen to the podcast AND read that particular episode’s show notes get get the full details.

Also, if you would like to give the chile pepper lover or hot sauce fanatic in your life a killer t-shirt, check out the selection Chilehead Tees.

Review – Sunny Gully Farms Fire Corn

Sunny Gully Farms Fire CornI present to you a couple of the most delectable sugary treats ever to have had any form of chile applied or added to it: Sunny Gully Farms Fire Corn and Sunny Gully Farms Chocolate Fire Corn. If you don’t live around the Scottville, Michigan area and the name Sunny Gully isn’t ringing a bell, you might know the owners, Bob and Sue Shuman as Mr. & Mrs. Hobbyfarmer from the last dozen or so Open Fields chile pepper festivals in Indiana. As you might have guessed, Bob has close ties to the Midwest spicy foods industry – he includes both Jim Campbell and CaJohn Hard as longtime friends – and sells a number of sauces, glazes and other food offerings under the Sunny Gully name to local farmers markets and stores. If you’ve attended Open Fields, you have probably sampled some freebies generously he generously handed out.

I don’t think I’ve really been nuts (no pun intended) about caramel corn of any kind since I was a young lad, when I’d crunch and munch (pun intended that time) on Cracker Jacks; and even then I’d be more interested in the cheapo “prize” at the bottom of the box than the food contents. Fire Corn blows away all the mass-produced brands of caramel corn and is without a doubt the best snack food of its kind I’ve ever eaten…

Review – Peppermaster Sauces

Peppermaster SaucesHere’s a foursome of uncommon sauces from our friends up North. Peppermaster is a Quebec, Canada outfit run by Greg and Tina Brooks and the couple has been steadily making their company’s presence known to American over the past few years with their massive lineup of unique sauces and products. The ones I’m reviewing today – Peppermaster Junior Chili Chocolate, Red Savina Mango, Nirvana Naga and Sweet Goatpepper Chili Sauce – are very representative of Peppermaster’s highly diverse offerings. I’m pleased to say that every single one is the polar opposite of run of the mill. If you’ve grown weary of copycat or “me too” sauces, give Peppermaster a try…

Palm Beach Gardens Company Wins Award

2010 SCOVIE AWARDS RECOGNIZES PALM BEACH GARDENS COMPANY FOR PRODUCT EXCELLENCE

When the results of the 2010 Scovie Awards, the world’s leading recognition for hot and spicy products, were announced, Chef Wayne Howey of Tropical Island Gourmet was excited to get the call from the competition organizers. Palm Beach Gardens-based Tropical Island Gourmet Co., which distributes a wide assortment of bottled sauces and Spice Blends, has received a First Place 2010 Scovie Award. In the industry’s most rigorous blind tastings, a panel of the country’s top culinary experts sampled hundreds of the world’s most lauded gourmet foods, and the top scoring products each won a coveted Scovie banner.

First Place in the Medium Hot Sauce category was awarded to Tropical Island Gourmet’s top selling “Fire Ant Juice” which is manufactured locally by Sauce Crafters (www.saucecrafters.com) in Riviera Beach Fl. Over 600 products from around the world competed for top honors. The Scovie Awards were created by Dave DeWitt, the nation’s leading author on fiery cuisine and founder of the National Fiery Foods & Barbecue Show. The awards are…

Ghost Chili in Facebook’s Farmville

It’s kind of cool to see the growing awareness of the ghost chili (AKA as the naga/bhut jolokia), the world’s hottest chile pepper, in the mainstream consciousness. One of the strangest ways has to be it’s presence in the Facebook app Farmville. My wife had come across the option in the program (I don’t play it myself) where you can choose what items to plant and grow on your virtual farm, and lo and behold here were these spicy little beauties. My better half had not yet reached a high enough level to purchase and raise the fiery crops, but it was interesting nonetheless to see them in the game. I’m guessing one or more of the developers of the app is a chilehead.

There are also regular bell peppers and generic chile peppers available as crops as well.

According to the latest numbers, Farmville has 69 million active users and counting. Yipes. That’s a lot of people this dangerously hot ghost chile pepper will be exposed to.

Ghost Chili in Facebook's Farmville

Ghost Chili in Facebook’s Farmville

It’s kind of cool to see the growing awareness of the ghost chili (AKA as the naga/bhut jolokia), the world’s hottest chile pepper, in the mainstream consciousness. One of the strangest ways has to be it’s presence in the Facebook app Farmville. My wife had come across the option in the program (I don’t play it myself) where you can choose what items to plant and grow on your virtual farm, and lo and behold here were these spicy little beauties. My better half had not yet reached a high enough level to purchase and raise the fiery crops, but it was interesting nonetheless to see them in the game. I’m guessing one or more of the developers of the app is a chilehead.

There are also regular bell peppers and generic chile peppers available as crops as well.

According to the latest numbers, Farmville has 69 million active users and counting. Yipes. That’s a lot of people this dangerously hot ghost chile pepper will be exposed to.

ghost-chilis-in-farmville-facebook

My Picks for the Best Products of 2009

My Picks for the Best Products of 2009It’s hard to believe another year is coming to a close. With that, it’s time for me to award what I considered to be the elite fiery food products of 2009. To qualify for the running I had to either formally review the product on my blog or try it out for the first time this past year.

Although most of the items listed below could be classified as “spicy”, overall flavor trumps fire any day. I judged the products based on several factors, including taste, aroma, texture, consistency, versatility, and balance of heat and flavor…

FireTalkers: Interview with Dave Hirschkop of Dave’s Gourmet

Dave Hirschkop of Dave's GourmetDave’s Insanity Sauce has the notoriety of not only once being the hottest sauce in the world in the 1990s, but it’s probably currently the most famous specialty hot sauce known by non-chileheads. Folks who aren’t heat freaks may be able to rattle off three or four “supermarket” pepper sauces like Frank’s, Tapatio or Tabasco, but when you press them about giving an example of a super-hot condiment, chances are they’ll name Dave’s Insanity more often than any other sauce.

It’s this distinction and mystique about Insanity Sauce that’s kept Dave near or at the top of the fiery foods game for over 15 years. But Dave’s Gourmet is far more than just their flagship product; Hirschkop’s company offers many other fine pepper sauces, plus pasta sauces, drink mixes, condiments, spicy snacks and more.

I was recently given the chance to speak with Dave to ask him a few questions. One might have expected a wild, gregarious man who once regularly wore a straightjacket to food shows and on the cover of his cookbook, Crazy from the Heat. Instead, Dave proved to be a genial, mild-mannered fellow. After conversing with him, I was given the impression that Dave would rather focus on making his company a diverse brand of gourmet food products (“more of a Trader Joe’s or Paul Newman’s” in his words) than just being makers of scorchingly hot products, something that would differentiate himself from peers such as Blair’s of CaJohn’s.

December 2009 Poll: Is the Trend of Spicy Fast Foods and Snack Foods Good or Bad?

There is a gradual introduction of hot and spicy foods in industry segments such as fast food restaurants and snack chips. You can get “spicy” chicken sandwiches, buffalo and habanero flavors, and even newer franchises (Chipotle and Qdoba, to name a couple) that cater a bit more to flavor-adventurous crowds.

Do you think this is a positive thing or a negative thing? You may think it’s good, because it slowly acclimates society to being more open to spicier and hotter flavors. Or you may think it’s bad, because the heat level in these foods may seem “watered down” to chileheads, and you may believe it’s doing a great disservice to those who love truly spicy foods. What do you think?

Some Like It Hot! Make Your Own Hot Sauce Kit

Some Like It Hot! Make Your Own Hot Sauce Kit

Just in time for Christmas… Have you ever wondered what it would be like to make your own hot sauce? Well, here’s an interesting little kit that attempts to get you started. The Some Like It Hot! Make Your Own Hot Sauce Kit contains instructions with a glossary and tips, three bottles with restrictor tips and caps, and six bags of spice (allspice, black cumin, curry powder, achiote, Jamaican jerk spice and ginger) to create different variations of the spicy stuff. All you add is your own chile peppers, vinegar, salt, and love. The entire package will run you $19.95 plus shipping and is available at
http://scientificsonline.com/product.asp?pn=3097700&bhcd2=1259719866M.