Corned Beef Barbecue!

Corned Beef Smoke Results

Clockwise from top: smoked corned beef, smoked dills, smoked full sours, smoked Vidalia onion

In honor of my late dad, a WWII vet who loved outdoor cookery, I spent Memorial Day smoking up some truly strange stuff for a corned beef barbecue. Here are the results, on a scale of 5=oh, yeah! To 1=are you kidding me?

Smoked Corned Beef. In my part of the country, brisket can be criminally expensive… often over $5 per pound. Yet that same brisket makes an appearance as corned beef for St. Patrick’s Day at $2 a pound or less. Why not take a corned beef brisket… and cook it on the smoker?

Smoked Corned Beef

Smoked corned beef

I did just that except with an eye of round (making do with what was available out of season). Used my standard brisket method with a brown sugar and black pepper rub (no need for salt obviously), 3 hours in the smoker followed by 3 hours tightly wrapped in foil in a 325 degree oven until falling apart.  Result was tender meat, pink like corned beef, lacking the smoke ring and crust found on a great Texas brisket. As corned beef it was excellent, as a smokehouse product pretty good, I’m giving it a 4=I’d do that again.

Corned Beef Burger

Corned beef burger

Corned Beef Burger. While prepping the meat it occurred to me to cut off a ¼ pound chunk and grind it into a burger which was then pan-fried and served on a bun with cheese and condiments. The taste was ok. The appearance, not so much. Couldn’t get it to brown and the crust had a pink hue even after cooking. 3=one and done.

Smoked pickles. Pickles go with corned beef, right? So let’s smoke them too! A full sour and a kosher dill were placed side by side on the top rack and smoked for 1 ½ hr. They both shriveled noticeably and maybe picked up a bit of smoke flavor, but not worth the bother. Ok for a sandwich, but 2=not gonna do that again.

Vidalia Onion and Pickles, Smoked

Smoked Vidalia onion

Smoked onion. At the very end of the smoke I took an unpeeled Vidalia onion and just tossed it onto the lower rack where I’d just taken out the meat, then added a couple chunks of wood to keep the fire going. 2 hours or so later I had a perfectly steamed onion that fell apart into graceful and delicately smoke-flavored petals when I cut it. No reason not to make one of these every time I smoke. 5=oh, yeah!

Smoked Pickles and Mozzarella

Smoked mozzarella

Smoked mozzarella. This one’s a ringer because I nearly always cut up a pound of cheap mozzarella, toss it into a well-used oven-safe bowl, and let it melt and absorb flavor at the top of the smoker for 1 ½ hours. Today’s was as good as ever, transforming a brick of supermarket cheese into a gourmet item. 5=oh, yeah!

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House brand taste test… cider vinegar!

Cider Vinegar Samples

The contenders, left to right: Great Value, Heinz, Bragg’s Organic

My last batch of sour slaw looked a little off-white and I realized it must be the cider vinegar: I was near the bottom of a jug of Bragg’s Organic, which not only is unfiltered but comes “with the mother” in case you want to make your own. I’ve always known Mrs. Dewey Goodman would not use such an eco-friendly and probably left-wing product, so it was off to the store for a gallon of good old Heinz.

However, a tour of several local markets turned up no Heinz cider vinegar gallons. White vinegar, yes, but for cider a quart is the largest size. So I bought it but couldn’t resist the gallon of Great Value sitting next to it at Walmart and costing just a few cents more. (As I recall the quart of Heinz was $2.99 and the gallon of Great Value was $3.99.)

Cider Vinegar jugs

Bragg’s Organic, Heinz, Clear Value in retail packaging

It was now time for a taste test. Samples of Bragg’s, Heinz and Great Value were placed side by side and tasters were asked to provide a combined score rating aroma, taste and acidity. This needed to be literally a blind tasting because the vinegars looked different—the unfiltered Bragg’s was muddy as one might expect, and the Heinz was noticeably paler than the Great Value. Since all three had only apples as their ingredient, no added color, this was an ominous sign suggesting more processing of fewer apples.

One taster liked the Heinz the best, the other two placed it at the bottom. We found it astringent and coarse though it did have an apple aroma. The Bragg’s had the best apple aroma and a pleasant taste but was judged overly mild as an acidic ingredient. I voted Great Value at the top and the other two placed it in the middle, making it our overall winner. Nothing special but nothing not to like and the value is undeniable.

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My visit with master baker Jeffrey Hamelman

Shaping two boules at one time

Jeffrey Hamelman demonstrates his virtuosity shaping two boules at the same time.

Last month I journeyed to the bucolic village of Norwich, VT to attend a workshop at the King Arthur Flour Education Center. The town itself is worth a visit… a peaceful hamlet across the Connecticut River from the beehive of activity at Dartmouth College, with a centuries-old inn (that has a good microbrewery on the premises) and a general store with creaking floorboards once trod by Calvin Coolidge, who lived nearby after his presidency.

prepping wood fired oven

Prepping the wood fired oven we used throughout the class

But I was here for the bread. Specifically, a workshop taught by Jeffrey Hamelman (author of Bread: A Baker’s Book of Techniques and Recipes
and one of my general heroes) on baking in a wood fired oven. Among the dozen students I was the only one with no serious plans to build or use a WFO, but no matter. There was plenty of general baking knowledge to be had.

All the students were either professional bakers or serious home bakers, and Hamelman and one of the students had scary looking burns on their arms to

Pizzas baked in the WFO

Pizzas baked in the Wood Fired Oven

prove it. As a result the class moved quickly. We baked a multi-grain sourdough, a flatbread turnover, a magnificent miche and an overnight-retarded pizza dough in the course of a day and a half and we ate as much as we wanted… our own creations as well as delicious pastries brought in from the store/bakery next door.

Slashing diagram for bread

There are many ways to slash a loaf before baking.

I got reinforced on some handling and shaping techniques, and learned some new ones: how to throw a pizza (it’s like tossing a Frisbee straight up in the air using both your hands, then catching it) and a better way of shaping my boules (keep rounding and tightening the ball of dough till bubbles from the fermentation appear on the surface, eager to burst through). I also learned that I am fortunate to have the northeastern supplier of King Arthur Flours in bulk (including some very esoteric varieties) right in my little town of Saratoga Springs, New York.

By bulk, I mean 50# bags. I can see lots of baking in my future, and will write about it here. Meanwhile, here’s the overnight pizza dough recipe.

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Recipe: Overnight Pizza Dough

Pizza made in KAF WFO class, using this dough

Pie made with overnight pizza dough in Jeffrey Hamelman’s Wood Fired Oven class

Adapted from Jeffrey Hamelman at King Arthur Flour. Unlike Pizza D’oh, overnight pizza dough a classic Neapolitan crust with nothing but flour, water, salt and leavening. Makes four individual pizzas (approximately 8 inch diameter).

Ingredients:
500 g all-purpose flour
340 ml water at 75 degrees F
1 t salt
½ t active dry yeast

Method (using Kitchenaid or other planetary mixer; the dough is a bit gloppy to mix by hand): Add all ingredients to bowl. Mix on first speed 3 minutes, scraping down the sides as needed to incorporate all the flour. Rest (autolyse) 20-30 minutes. Mix on second speed 5 minutes until gluten is moderately developed.

Bulk ferment one hour. Preshape lightly into a ball and cover with plastic wrap. Refrigerate overnight.

One hour before final shaping, remove the dough from refrigerator and divide into four balls. To form each pizza press with the heel of your hand to make a disk approximately 4” across then expand this either by pressing outward on the edges or by tossing the pizza (or a combination) to a finished diameter of 8” or so. The thinner the better, but don’t make it so thin that holes appear. (If they do, patch them with dough from a thicker part of the pizza.)

Place the pizza dough directly on a silicon baking pad, add toppings as desired, then transfer the pizza on its pad to a preheated pizza stone or cookie sheet up to 500 degrees (easy safe way). Or, form the pizza on a peel with lots of cornmeal underneath, add toppings as desired, slide back and forth to test; if there are any sticky spots lift the edge of the pizza and toss more cornmeal underneath; transfer by sliding from the peel directly onto a pizza stone or grill (living dangerously but professional way).

NOTE: “moderately developed gluten” means that you can pull on the dough and it will thin out to the point that you can see light through it (“gluten window”) rather than tearing. If it tears at this stage it is likely to tear when you stretch it into pizza so give it more kneading/development time.

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Recipe: Sautéed Fiddleheads

Sauteed Fiddleheads

Sautéed fiddleheads

I ran into some nice fiddleheads last weekend at a local market in Vermont. I used a few on a pizza and sautéed the rest. Serves 4 as a vegetable side dish.

Ingredients:
1 lb fiddleheads
2 T butter or olive oil
1 T chopped garlic
Kosher salt to taste

Method: Boil unwashed fiddleheads 10 minutes, drain and cool with cold water. Cut off any brown ends and remove brown papery bits that may cling to the heads. Saute garlic in butter or olive oil till just beginning to color, add fiddleheads, cook until heated through, add salt to taste.

Comment: Fiddleheads are the tightly curled ends of ferns before they unfurl. You want heads that are tight with a minimum of brown stuff. Most recipes say they “taste like asparagus” which isn’t true. The texture is kind of like asparagus but the flavor is a simpler green chlorophyll taste which feels and looks like springtime. Also, if you’re harvesting yourself (and know which kind to look for, with the big single violin-scroll heads like the picture) the top parts of the stem are just as good.

The harvester advised me to boil them 10 minutes to get rid of unspecified bad chemicals. That’s way too long. If you’re going to use them in another prep, just bring them to the boil, blanch one minute, drain. To cook through, 5 minutes will do it. Further research suggests a toxin called ptaquiloside is responsible for the occasional reports of gastric distress after eating fiddleheads, but it dissipates in the presence of heat. So go ahead and give them that 10 minutes, or 5 if you want to live dangerously.

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Taste Test: In-N-Out Animal Style vs Texas Burger

Two Burgers

Texas Style on the left, Animal Style on the right

As a native Texan, I believe two things about a burger. #1, it has to have mustard. #2, it’s all about the vegetables. A generous amount of properly prepped lettuce, tomato, onion and pickle will compensate for a thin leathery patty, but a juicy and oversize patty will never make up for measly condiments no matter how good the meat. And it does not have Thousand Island dressing which makes the burger a gooey mess.

I went to school in California’s San Gabriel Valley, near In-N-Out’s original location, so I was exposed to this now-iconic burger earlier than most folks. (A colleague had a meeting at In-N-Out’s corporate headquarters, in Azusa, and reported that their “that’s what a hamburger is all about” theme music was piped into the board room.) I found the burger was pretty good, but it needed some tweaks. The Thousand Island dressing had to be replaced with mustard, we needed pickles, and some extra onion wouldn’t hurt. Luckily, the In-N-Out folks are very tolerant of mods like this.

Well, the other day I mentioned to my friend and fellow blogger Daniel Berman that I was headed to San Francisco and my first gustatory stop would be the In-N-Out on Fisherman’s Wharf. He asked me if I would be ordering Animal Style and I explained my preference. But it occurred to me I really should do a taste test.

Animal Style halfway done

Animal Style, halfway eaten

Animal Style is one of those urban legends which really does exist… the not-so-secret “secret menu” which were requested by at least half the diners on this foggy night. You can’t find it on their website (the many food articles that give a link now come up with dead air) but it’s programmed into the cash registers. An Animal Style cheeseburger specifically has grilled onions, pickles, and a patty that’s been exposed to some mustard on the griddle. (They squirt it on top as it’s grilling.) It also has Thousand Island dressing.

Texas style, halfway done

Halfway through my Texas style, still crisp and good!

The result? Absolutely no question my version is better though I encourage you to do your own test. Putting the mustard right on the bun (which has been lightly toasted) allows the flavor to develop. And the onions have to be raw and plentiful. You need that crunch and that jolt of the sulfur compounds to set off the coolness of the tomato and the crisp of the lettuce. Sauteed/grilled onions lose their edge in taste and weigh down the burger; I want it light and crisp so I can eat several of them.

My “in progress” photographs say it all. Halfway through, the Animal has devolved into a mélange, its individual components no longer distinguishable. While the Texas style remains a symphony of tastes and components including crisp, spicy and fatty.

So order it this way: “extra onions, pickles, mustard instead”. You will thank me. Bonus tip: In-N-Out now has packets of hot pickled peppers under the counter. Ask them to toss in a couple with your order.

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Recipe: Peanut Butter Sandwich with Cheese and Onion

Peanut butter, cheese and onion sandwich

Peanut butter, cheese and onion sandwich

Bored with PBJ? Try this peanut butter, cheese and onion concoction that was introduced to me by my college roommate Elliot. It’s filling, gives you lots of protein and fiber, and the tastes complement each other surprisingly well.

Ingredients:
2 slices whole grain bread
Peanut butter, good quality not Skippy
2 or 3 slices of sweet onion such as Vidalia
2 or 3 slices sharp cheddar cheese

Method: spread peanut butter thinly on both slices of bread, add cheese and onion, eat.

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A long strange trip to the perfect pickle

Patricia Fairhurst and her pickles

Patricia Fairhurst at her post

In a somewhat out-of-the-way location in Clinton Hill, Brooklyn, Patricia Fairhurst scoops into a pickle barrel and comes up with as good a full sour as I’ve had in my lifetime. Clinton Hill Pickles is across the street from a housing project and a public park yet on this partly cloudy April afternoon the setting seems peaceful, even idyllic, albeit with some police action nearby. A row of pickle barrels is her storefront and neighbors stop by for their favorites on their way home, much as commuters in other areas might pause for a beer.

87 Orchard St

The previous location is now a cigar store.

Not that long ago, Ms. Fairhurst was the proprietor of the legendary Guss’ Pickles on the Manhattan’s Lower East Side. Some tour books still point to the iconic location near the Tenement Museum at 87 Orchard Street, which today houses a cigar store. What happened? And why does the website for Guss’ Pickles emphasize “Others claim to be Guss’ Pickles or affiliated with Guss Pickles but that is not true! Guss’ Pickles is a registered trademark of Crossing Delancey Pickle Enterprises CORP. West End, New Jersey 07740”?

Clinton Hill Pickles storefront

Clinton Hill Pickles storefront

The roots of the story are not in dispute. In the early 1900s, a young Russian immigrant named Izzy Guss sold pickles from a pushcart, then opened a store on Hester Street. Eventually the shop ended up at the Orchard Street location, where it remained till after Izzy Guss died in 1975. According to a detailed article in a local blog, 4 years later the family sold the business to Harold Baker (not the ex-senator) whose son Tim eventually took over the store. And it’s about this time that the pickle brine begins to get murky.

Could it be that an interloper named Andrew Liebowitz saw the movie “Crossing Delancey”, fell in love with the idea of Lower East Side pickles, discovered that the original owners had never trademarked the name Guss’, and usurped it so successfully that the “real” Guss’ had to give up the name with the dispensation that they were allowed to continue operating as Guss’ but only from the Orchard Street location? An enthusiastic fan on Chowhound.com had me believing this version for awhile, pointing out that the home page copy at gusspickles.com never exactly says they are the same as the family that started Guss’. But it seemed strange that somebody could just hijack a recognized brand name like that, no?

Patricia Fairhurst told me she moved from the LES because of the changing nature of the neighborhood including a parking meter installed in front of her door; rents were rising, traffic enforcement was increasing, and patrons could no longer double park and dart in for a pickle. She initially relocated to 15th Ave and 39th in Brooklyn where she named the store Ess-A-Pickle; she had some “problems with neighbors” including a practice of parking on the sidewalk right in front of her store so one day she could not even open her gate; she’s moved again to Classen Avenue in Clinton Hill which is right up the street from her home.

I asked her why she isn’t called Guss’ Pickles and told her I knew about the controversy. I wasn’t taking notes, this was a casual conversation, so don’t quote us. She said Liebowitz was implying he owned her shop and she sued to retain her right to the name. But it wasn’t a big deal because her phone number (212) 334-3616 has remained the same through all her moves so her loyal customers know where to find her.

Fairhurst implies that the legal result ended the dispute but the big problem is that the original owners never trademarked the name. Being an ad guy, I noticed the pickles are dispensed into unlabeled containers; was it always that way? Yes. We agree that a label would have helped to establish ownership of the brand. However, she still has the original Guss’ sign, tucked away somewhere in her store, even though gusspickle.com features it on their website.

Full sours from Clinton Hill Pickles

Full sours from Clinton Hill Pickles

I bought an assortment of her pickles and can tell you they are as good as a pure and simple kosher dill can get. This is like hitting a high note where you make it or you don’t. The balance of crunch, salt and garlic is just perfect and she sells at exactly the point where the pickle is ready to devour. My teenager bought some “spicy” dills and I’m sure you could do interesting things with smoked peppers, fennel and various herbs and seeds but that’s an embellishment, not the core product.


Armed with my tub of pickles and a fully charged laptop, I attempted to get to the bottom of this. Fairhurst’s attorney, Ronald Coleman (not the actor), presents the case as a success story on his website and includes the full text of the complaint, the adversaries wonderfully identified as “World Famous Pickle Corp. vs Crossing Delancey Pickle Enterprises”.

My pickle order from Clinton Hill Pickles

My pickle order (note absence of labels)

Coleman cites this story in the NY Times cityroom blog which is an excellent history and includes links to the complaint (same as above), a response by defendant, a counterclaim by plaintiff but unfortunately not the final settlement which was confidential.

The reader quickly discovers that Andrew Liebowitz was not an out-of-the-blue opportunist. His family had sold cucumbers to Guss’ for many years and continued to do so to Patricia Fairhust. The defendant’s response goes beyond this to allege that they actually made some or, at times, all of the pickles sold by Guss’. Under the name United Pickle they supplied up to 20% of the pickles sold by the original Izzy Guss when demand exceeded his ability to make his own pickles. After the sale to Harold Baker they “perfected the proprietary recipe” and the pickles sold as Guss’ were in fact Liebowitz pickles.

The Liebowitz response also alleges that Tim Baker had signed over any right to the Guss’ name as collateral for a loan; he did not repay the loan and the name became theirs. Baker, who departed to Florida after selling the shop, has said that “no money changed hands” when Liebowitz acquired the name which certainly sounds disingenuous if the above is true.

After she bought the store, Patricia Fairhurst switched to another cucumber supplier; this may have been the catalyst for Liebowitz allegations that she was not the real Guss’ and Fairhurst’s subsequent suit to protect her business. After the initial salvos, Liebowitz made a settlement offer that was reported in the Village Voice. Patricia Fairhurst would resume buying her pickles from Liebowitz and would not “interfere with or disparage the pickles” from United. She would withdraw her claim to the Guss’ trademark. Fairhurst’s response: “They have nerve to even show this to us.”

And then… the confidential settlement described as a victory by Fairhurst’s attorney. Did she agree that she could continue operating as Guss’ but only as long as she stayed at the Orchard Street location? Nobody’s saying. So where does this leave us?

Patricia Fairhurst refuses to present herself as a martyr, but it would appear that she got the short end of the stirring paddle. She purchased a business in 2004 whose trademark Tim Baker had apparently given up in 2002; it’s hard to believe she would have spent so much legal energy (and probably a good amount of money) asserting her right to the name if she did not believe it was legitimately hers.

I haven’t mentioned the reason I originally got curious about Guss’ pickles. Knowing none of this history, I wanted to order some from the gusspickles.com website but preferred to pick them up locally so I could see how they were made. The person on the other end of the line was very evasive, said he’d call me back but never did.

Even though he’s the scion of a cucumber dynasty, there’s no evidence that Andrew Leibowitz ever had his hand in a pickle barrel. Of Patricia Fairhurst at her old location, the New York Times said “she may be found there six days a week, wrapped in an apron, topped by a newsboy cap and spouting Brooklynese, selling the briny little cucumbers and other pickled delights from bright orange barrels that line the sidewalk and lace the air with salt.”

The bottom line is that Patricia Fairhurst was willing to dip me a pickle when Andrew Liebowitz wouldn’t. Legal schmegal aside, she’s paid her dues at the pickle barrel on the sidewalk. Patricia Fairhurst, you’ve got my business.

Clinton Hill Pickles is at 431 Dekalb Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11205. The actual storefront is around the corner on Classon–look for the pickle barrels out front. Closed Saturday.

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Korean Fried Chicken Lunch at Momofuku Noodle Bar

Fried Chicken at Momofuku Noodle Bar

Fried Chicken at Momofuku Noodle Bar (the Southern style is in front)

The Mrs. treated us to a Korean fried chicken meal at Momofuku Noodle Bar on Manhattan’s Lower East Side. You get two whole chickens for a Benjamin, one fried up Korean style and southern style, and assorted condiments. They can only prepare one chicken meal at a time so reservations must be made far in advance.

It was mighty good. David Chang has a unique way of cooking the chicken which would be difficult-to-impossible to duplicate at home. It’s brined, then sweated in a steam filled oven of the type used for bread baking until it reaches an intenal temperature of 160 degrees (I think… Chang says it is cooked at 160 degrees but that doesn’t make sense because it wouldn’t produce steam). Only then is it battered and fried. This process somehow makes the batter and skin adhere to the meat instead of peeling off like it usually does.

Condiments at Momofuku Noodle Bar

Condiments (what was left of them halfway through the meal) with scallion/ginger, my favorite, in front

The Korean style chicken had a glaze that was definitely gochugaru yet milder and less vinegary than my prep. It had cooked all the way through to the point that the smaller bones were crunchy and brittle and could be gobbled like sardine bones if one wished (I did) yet the meat was not overcooked. The southern style had a buttermilk batter with an unusual spice mix that we decided might be pumpkin pie spice but was later identified as Old Bay Seasoning.

Along with this came a big bowl of veggies for eating in a rolled up lettuce leaf, ssam-style and a container of crepes/pancakes that were like the ones you get for moo shu pork but thicker. And lots of condiments for dipping and pouring on. We tried all the combos and there was no way to avoid a gloriously messy eating experience. (Our table, unlike others, was covered in butcher paper in anticipation of our arrival.) These were proud, meaty birds, raised I am confident in a happy manner at one of the farms listed on a blackboard as you come in, and even the wings had plenty of meat.

The most distinctive part of the meal actually came at the end, when I was in a food coma so unable to photo it. Chang has acquired a soft serve machine and presents unusual combinations, consisting today of a beet/lime combo crossed with yogurt and served on a bed of pistachio crumble. Incredible.

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Of pepper sauce, sport peppers and pepper sport

The current management added a table service at the Highland Park Cafeteria. You still have to carry your own tray (unless, like many of the patrons, you’re too infirm to do this) but then a solicitous person will stop by and ask you if you want ice tea refills and “can I bring you any pepper sauce?”

Cajun Chef Tabasco Peppers

Cajun Chef pepper sauce

That last would be nonsense to a northerner, but it’s music to our ears down south. Pepper sauce isn’t Tabasco (we call that “tabasco”) or a less legendary sauce like Crystal or Louisiana (we call that “hot sauce”). “Pepper sauce” is, specifically, green peppers that have been cured in vinegar and packed in a little bottle with a shaker top. The peppers never leave the bottle; you shake the flavored vinegar onto collards, turnip greens, blackeyed peas and, if you’re me, fried items like okra and chicken. The vinegar adds tanginess to a mild base flavor and the pepper gives just the right amount of heat.

In my family we would buy whatever brand was at Tom Thumb (usually Trappey’s) and refill it with white vinegar when the liquid ran out. After a few refills the peppers would look wan and shriveled and it would be time for a new bottle. When I sat down to write this post it occurred to me that probably isn’t a best practice; aren’t there other ingredients that add flavor complexity to a newly opened batch? Taste test time!

I compared a well-used bottle and brand new bottle of the same brand, Cajun Chef (that’s what they now serve at HPC) and there definitely is a difference. The newer pepper sauce is saltier and has a vegetal muskiness that’s missing from the well-used bottles. From now on my policy will be 2 refills then out.

Now as to sport peppers. The last time I was at HPC the sauce was actually “Sport Peppers” not “Tabasco Peppers” though it tasted the same. The chiles looked like tabascos but a bit bigger. Roadfood.com, not surprisingly, has a very long thread spanning many years on what sport peppers are and are not. It’s wonderful to see how passionate people can completely disregard solid botanical evidence in the post just above theirs.

Various folks allege that sport peppers are a/just bigger tabascos b/serranos c/pepperoncinis Italian style d/a specific variety called “capsicum annuum” or d/a cultivar of capsicum annuum. At least some of these folks are intentionally talking out their bunghole, and that’s when the sport comes in.

I am going to cast my vote for a/ and d/, and agree with the poster who says “sport” means they are a sport or offshoot of tabascos vs. a pepper served at a sporting event (yes, others say that). Anyone who has had a hot pepper lose its heat because it’s planted near a bell pepper plant in the garden knows how easily this can happen. And capsicum annuum turns out to be the entire happy family of capsicum peppers; they even have their own website.

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