
One-Eyed Jalapeno Poppers are great appetizers. While standard restaurant jalapeno poppers are usually breaded and fried, my outdoor version is grilled and much more flavorful. This appetizer is a big hit with people who like a little bit of heat in their food, but you can remove most of the heat to accommodate wimps if you wish.
There are many variations on this recipe. Most call for wrapping the halved jalapenos with bacon and holding it in place with toothpicks. That's too much of a pain for me, and the dripping grease can put all kinds of soot on things. so I just put the bacon in the filling. Another problem with most recipes I've seen is that the cheese melts and oozes out. I've solved the problem by using a pimento-stuffed olive as a plug. Hence the name "One-Eyed Jalapeno Poppers". The olive is not only functional, it tastes great!
The cool part (pun intended) is that the best way to extinguish capsaicin heat is with cooking and dairy fat. Cooking somehow disarms jalapenos, and the cheese in this recipe not only tastes good, it also helps control the fire. If you remove the seeds and ribs, you can remove 90% of the heat if you wish, and the flavor is wonderful. They are great with cold beer.
Yield. 24 pepper halves
Preparation time. 30 minutes
Cooking time. 20 minutes
Ingredients
8 ounces of Home-made Boursin-style Cheese Spread at room temperature
1/2 cup sharp cheddar
2 teaspoons sugar
12 fresh jalapenos
24 green olives with pimento stuffing
1 teaspoon paprika
Option. Cook 6 strips of bacon until crisp. Let it cool, crumble it into small bits, and mix it into the stuffing. Or try a little leftover pulled pork in the mix. Or go upscale and mix some crabmeat into the stuffing.
Option. Try replacing the cheddar with blue cheese, mozzarella, jack, queso quesadilla, or queso asadero.
Option. If you like things really hot, use habanero peppers.
Do this
1) Prepare the Home-made Boursin-style Cheese Spread and mix in the cheddar and sugar. Or leave them out. They are a nice addition, but not necessary. Add bacon or other meat bits if you wish.
2) Put on kitchen gloves to work on the peppers. With a thin sharp filleting or paring knife, cut the stems off and discard them. Then cut them in half lengthwise. Run the blade along the inside wall of the pepper removing the seeds and the white ribs. If you like hot stuff, leave the ribs in.
3) Spread the cheese mix into the peppers, but not so much that it will overflow when cooking. Put an olive at the stem end, to act like a plug and help keep the cheese in when it melts. Sprinkle the paprika on top.
Option. You don't have to cut them in half. You can just cut off the ends and remove the innards with a potato peeler and stuff the whole pepper. The olive in the end will keep the cheese inside.
4) Fire up the grill and cook over a low heat or indirectly until the the cheese melts and the pepper bottoms get a little brown. Try not to let the peppers go limp so they still have a little crunch. Remove gently and let them cool a bit before serving. They are also great at room temp or right out of the fridge. Make sure you have plenty of cold beer on hand.
Option. Try smoking them at about 200F for 30 minutes.
This page modified 8/5/07