It was during a trip to Jamaica with our parents that my brother and I discovered the "Jerk" style.
We were staying at an all-inclusive resort with big 5-star buffets, but when our path crossed the "Jerk Hut", the buffet was over for my father, my brother and I. After tasting the chicken and pork cooked over a live fire in a steel barrel cut in 2 with an old grill coated in caramelized sauce, nothing was interesting anymore and that taste has marked us forever. Since then, we have tried several marinades and spices but none of them were like what we had tasted on our trip.Jerk is a spice with a very unique flavor and completely different from the usual spice blends, the only “catch” is that, for some people, it is really hot! As our mission is always to offer products for everyone, there was a problem here, because one of the bases of Jerk cooking is the scotch bonnet pepper, which is at 325,000 on the Scoville scale. To give you a comparison, the original Tabasco sauce is at about 5000 on this same scale of measuring the heat of peppers. Roughly speaking, we are talking about more than 50 times hotter than Tabasco, which is already not a mainstream sauce.
Our mission: to keep the unique flavor of Jerk but make it perfect for everyone. The essential ingredient is of course Jamaican pepper, often called 4 spices, allspice or in English allspice. It has its own flavor, which mixes several known aromas like cloves, cinnamon and nutmeg, with 1 single ingredient that brings all these tastes together, it is obvious that it was essential to our Jamaican Jerk spice recipe.
So we had to find a way to replace the scotch bonnet pepper to avoid any potential burns. The scotch bonnet, although very spicy, has a slightly sweet taste. So we had to replace the sugar and reduce the spiciness while ensuring that we had the taste of a pepper that everyone liked and that did not distort the Jerk style. Replacing the sugar was easy: organic sugar and that was it. Now for the pepper, what hot pepper is used in several sauces, in most of our mothers' and grandmothers' spaghetti sauces, that we put on our boiled eggs and that is sometimes even used with ice cream? Cayenne pepper! About 10 times less spicy than the scotch bonnet, we had part of the recipe in hand! Now we just had to balance everything well, test one version after the other by adjusting the quantities each time to finally have our perfect mix!
We had found the perfect blend, ours. Now all that was left was to test it with food:
Jerk Chicken: Success
Jamaican Pork: Success
Mixed with rice: Success
Shrimp skewers: Success
Grilled white fish: success
It was off to a good start! The ultimate tests were those where we tasted with the most varied foods that exist. From the blandest to the already delicious before any seasoning. It was time for my favorite vegetable dip: hummus! And yes, Jerk Humus! Who would have thought of doing that one day… ME! Well, I have to admit this spice is good on everything I have tried but in hummus, it is completely crazy! Maybe it allows me to eat more spices, which I love, but this mix is especially great because the taste that comes out is Jerk and not humus so it is a winning mix!
Second food on the test bench: cucumbers, a neutral food with no particular taste except that it tastes like crunchy water. The bets were made! I cut my cucumbers into 1cm slices, I added the Jerk spice and, drum roll... 1 cucumber, 2 cucumbers and I could have continued but my body can't drink that much water I think!
So now why not try it with beef; we go for a meatball of ground beef mixed with onion, garlic and mushrooms sautéed in butter with Jerk spices, cook on indirect at 350 for 5-7 minutes, then add a little jerk on top and bottom and grill for 1 minute per side and WOW again phenomenal results!
I could have continued to do tests for years but each time it was conclusive so we had to share this with as many people as possible!
So if you like Caribbean flavors, which are slightly different from our usual but go well with absolutely everything, Jamaican Jerk spices are for you! Feel free to put them in your paella, your guacamole and even in cottage cheese for a dip and don't neglect any food to grill, so you can enjoy while saying: Yah Man!