![cowboy candy cowboy candy](http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-zcGEnSvjpuY/UizGVQ0QHWI/AAAAAAAABdw/CCB6mItZ0mo/s400/cb6.jpg)
Have you ever heard of Cowboy Candy before? These were so good I could’ve eaten it with a spoon! I understand why Melissa loves em’ so much. Pour the super hot liquid over the jalapeno’s. If you want to make this like a jelly, you want to continue to stir and boil until it thickly coats the spoon. I thickened the sauce until it lightly coated the spoon.
![cowboy candy cowboy candy](https://ourlittlehomestead.org/wp-content/uploads/cowboy-candy-recipe-1-500x500.jpg)
I purposely made the sauce a little thin. You want to bring this to a boil… once it reaches a rolling boil, reduce heat to a low boil and stir until the sauce thickens. All of that went in the jar.įor the sauce, I combined 2 cups of white vinegar, 4 cups of sugar, and 1 tsp turmeric. I sliced up the jalapeno’s and roughly chopped four cloves of garlic. Obviously I didn’t have enough to fill the jar… so I just went with it. Here’s a little advice… what you’re suppose to do is fill the entire empty jar with jalalpeno’s… filled to the top. I scoured the internet and looked at tons of recipes… after getting way too confused, I made my own. She saw my post about my first jalapeno pickling experience and asked me if I’d had Cowboy Candy before. Even though I’m a born and raised Texan… I had never heard of Cowboy Candy until my friend, Melissa, from high school told me about it.
![cowboy candy cowboy candy](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0335/7700/9283/products/Cowboy_2500x.jpg)