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Caroline's
Smoke and Spice

FOR THOSE PASSIONATE ABOUT FLAVOR!

August 2005 Issue # 7


From our Editor's desk...

Hello,
Wow! Summer is in full swing, and it has been really hot as well as humid - a bit too humid for my tastes. But I have to admit, I will gladly take this heat wave over the freezing rain and snow any day!
This month we are going to look at a pepper that we all have trouble pronouncing, but few of us have trouble enjoying - the Chipotle pepper.
 
Our recipe of the month is a great side dish for your next barbecue...Southern Style Crock Pot Pinto Beans, featuring our Texas Chili Seasoning. You can't beat these beans for a rich, hearty and full flavored addition to your next cookout.
Our buy one, get one free featured special ends this month, so be sure to take advantage of this great offer and stock up on our Cajun Bayou Blend and our Texas Beef and Game Rub!.
See you next month!
Joe and Amy Johnson
Founders, Caroline's Rub

The Mysterious Chipotle

The Chipotle...


Chipotle [chuh-POTE-lee] peppers are smoked, fully mature red jalapeño chili peppers, and are also known by the name chili ahumado. These chilies are usually a dull tan to coffee color and measure approximately 2 to 4 inches in length and about an inch wide. As much as one fifth of the Mexican jalapeño crop is processed into Chipotles.

History
Chipotles date back prior to the Aztec civilization in a region that is now northern Mexico City. It is conjectured that the Aztecs smoked the chilies because the thick, fleshy, jalapeño was difficult to dry and prone to rot. The Aztecs used the same "smoke drying" process for the chilies as they used for drying meats, which allowed the chilies to be stored for a substantial period of time.

Today Chipotles are used widely throughout Mexico as well as in the United States and Canada. Most popular in the South Western U.S. and California, Chipotles have found their way into the cuisine of many celebrity chefs from Hawaii to Manhattan.

Varieties

The true chipotle is grayish-tan, quite stiff, and is often described as looking like a cigar butt. It is deeply imbued with smoke and is both hot and flavorful. This main variety is also called chile ahumado (smoked chile); chile meco (blackish-red chile; meco is close to seco, meaning dry); the double terms chipotle meco and chipotle típico, and just típico. Further confusing the issue is a cultivated variety of jalapeño that is also named 'Típico.' Yes, the 'Típico' variety is often smoked to become a típico chipotle.

Other varieties of smoked jalapeños are often mistaken for the típico chipotle. The most common one is called morita, which means "little blackberry" in Spanish. The color of this smoked chile is dark red, sometimes approaching purple in color. Often the morita is referred to as a smoked serrano chile, but this is inaccurate. Both the típico and the morita are smoked jalapeños; the difference is that the morita is not smoked nearly as long, and thus it remains very leathery and pliable. Not only is the smoky flavor much more intense in the típico, its flavor is much richer.

But the morita is commonly marketed as the típico chipotle because it can bring $2 to $4 more per pound with that name. Unfortunately, most of the "chipotles" being sold in markets in the United States are in actuality the inferior morita. This is because most of the chipotles produced in Mexico are eaten there, leaving little for export.

To make up for lack of the típico variety to export, producers in the northern states of Mexico, particularly Chihuahua, have turned to the morita, which are much less expensive to produce. Unfortunately, they call the morita "chipotles" and sometimes claim that they have never heard of the típico variety. To further confuse the issue, in the interior, the típico is known by brokers as "Veracruz."

Other varieties of smoked chiles include:

Cobán: a piquín chile that is smoked in southern Mexico and Guatemala.

Pasilla de Oaxaca: a variety of pasilla chile that is smoked in Oaxaca and is used in the famous mole negro.

Jalapeño chico: jalapeños that are smoked while still green. Usually, they are culls from the fresh market that need to be preserved, and the smoke-drying process obscures any blemishes.

Capones: This rare smoked chile is a red jalapeño without seeds; the term means "castrated ones." They are quite expensive and are rarely exported.

Habanero: recently, a smoked habanero product has been introduced into the United States. It is used as a very hot substitute for any chipotle.

Our Recipe of the Month
What goes better with that brisket, burgers, chicken, or sausage coming fresh off the grill than a side of good old fashioned Southern pinto beans! The key to these is the long, slow cooking time - don't rush it. They are worth the wait!

Southern Style Crock Pot Pinto Beans
Southern Style Crock Pot Pinto Beans

Makes about 6 cups.

2 c. dried pinto beans
1 clove garlic, finely minced
1/2 onion, finely chopped
1 carrot, sliced
2-3 jalapeños - seeded and finely chopped
1 tbs. Caroline's Texas Chili Seasoning
1 tsp. ground black pepper
1 c. finely chopped bacon
1 tsp. salt, or more to taste

Don't be in a rush to cook beans. They taste best when they are cooked very slowly. A Crock-pot is really the perfect cooking vessel for home-cooked pintos.

Sort the beans to remove any stones or grit, and rinse in a colander. Place the beans in a Crock-pot with 6 cups of water.

Add the garlic, onion, carrot, jalapeños, Caroline's Texas Chili Seasoning, pepper, bacon, and salt. Cook on high for 2 hours. Turn to low, and allow to simmer for 8 hours or overnight. Add more water as needed.

Variations: Beans and Sausage. For something a little different, we like to serve a bowl of these beans topped with sliced sausage from our favorite butchers and a little chopped onion. You can spike the beans with hot sauce if you like. Serve the beans as a side to a great brisket, or on their own with lots of saltines
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Our Featured Special

Purchase one bag of Texas Beef & Game Rub or Cajun Bayou Rub, and get another bag of either blend absolutely FREE!! Offer ends this month!
Visit us often at www.carolinesrub.com for updates and more information.

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Caroline's Rub
5929L Jeanne D'Arc Blvd.
Suite 260
Ottawa, Ontario K1C 7M3 Canada
Tel. 613.841.8200 or 866.827.1085


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