Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Making Pepper-Flavored Vodka

Question

I'm interested in infusing pepper flavor into vodka like in Naga Chili Vodka.

Are there any peppers I should specifically avoid and how should I infuse the flavor/spiciness? In addition, other than varying the types of peppers and number of peppers how can I control the spiciness? Is a higher proof of vodka recommended, and does the quality of the vodka matter in this case?

Asked by jandjorgensen

Answer

From my limited (but successful) experience, here are some answers to your subjective questions:

  • Choose peppers whose flavor you do want
  • Avoid peppers whose flavor you do not like (I'd never infuse green bell pepper, blech!)
  • Choose a vodka you'd want to drink (if you like cheap vodka, use it, if you like expensive vodka, use that)

As far as the mechanics of making the infused vodka:

  • Chop the peppers up coarsely, drop into a glass jar with the vodka, taste every 12 hours until you get the flavor/heat you want, then strain the vodka.
  • The longer you infuse, the stronger/spicier the result.
  • If you're going more for flavor (less for heat) remove the seeds and pith
  • The proof of the vodka (80-100) will have little difference in the end result as far as the infused flavor goes. Everclear (190+ proof) will probably extract flavors faster, but do you want to drink it????

If, on the other hand, you are really just wanting to get the spiciest drink available, then don't bother infusing vodka, just google how to get/make capsaicin concentrate and use that directly. Then add directly to the drink of your choice.

I've not tried dried chilies, but I imagine a Chipotle infused vodka would make an awesome Bloody Mary.

Answered by Trey Jackson

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