Some of my friends are disgusted by my eating habits. I just get excited about things that would make certain people hurl. I can live with that. When you grow up with favorite foods like lamb brains and pig’s feet, you learn to get comfortable on your lone little island. At least I had my brothers, who were as clueless about the grossness of our eating preferences as I was. We ate what our parents and grandparents made for us. They, in turn, cooked what they grew up on in Sicily: peasant food. The cheaper, leftover animal parts that the middle class couldn’t be bothered with; the vegetables and fish that were available in their village. We lived in a bubble of family and broken English, oblivious to what wafs considered strange or normal outside our door.
Eat these with a hunk of bread and hard cheese. It makes the perfect dinner.
Pickled Peppers Stuffed with Anchovies
1 pound hot peppers
2 tablespoons kosher salt
1 cup white vinegar
½ pound salted anchovies
Olive oil
Cut a vertical slit down the center of each pepper. Gently scoop out the seeds, being careful to keep the pepper’s shape intact (a demitasse spoon is perfect for this).
Wash the peppers and pat them dry, then toss in a large bowl with kosher salt. Cover and set aside overnight.
After 24 hour, rinse the peppers and return them to the bowl. Cover with white vinegar, using a plate to keep them submerged. Set aside for 48 hours.
After two days, drain the peppers and rinse them again so they’re not too vinegary; pat dry. Then rinse and debone the anchovies. Prepare one anchovy fillet for each pepper (or more if you’d like, but too much can be overwhelming). Stuff each pepper with an anchovy fillets to fill the length of the pepper.
Layer the peppers in a sealable container or prop them up in a mason jar. Cover with enough olive oil to keep them submerged. Always keep these refrigerated and eat them rather quickly. Since they’re not sterilized during the “pickling” process (they’re not even officially pickled), they won’t have an infinite shelf life.
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I’ve had these before. I agree, they are unbelievable.
I never thought about this combination before, but after trying this recipe, it’s like lightning hit. Peppers and anchovies just make sense! Delicious.
I grew up exactly the same way eating exactly the same foods! I make your peppers often although I use a faster method taught to me by my grandfather. I’m sure flavor is identical.
Hey. I love these peppers. I’m gonna keep it short…. What type of oil do you use?
I find that olive oil of any type solidified in the refrigerator….is this normal, good? Or should it be vegetable oil.
Over 20 years ago, my local pork store would make these peppers, before they sold shop, I begged the owner, how do I make these peppers, I vaguely remember him saying to use vegetable oil….
I would appreciate your input, you’re the only person I found that knows these peppers or just the process to making them.
Thank you