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End-of-Summer Card Party Salsas

Mango Salsa - Macro
Image by windelbo via Flickr

Somehow my husband’s golf buddies and their spouses have gotten the idea that I can’t, or won’t, cook, so when they planned their end of summer pot luck card party, I was invited to bring a dip and some chips. I did not know about the reputation that has preceded me, so I immediately thought about making my favorite spicy fruit salsa.

My daughter has a recipe for a multi-fruit salsa that is to die for. My own recipe for cranberry salsa is a favorite every Christmas (it is great on ham), and this mango salsa is refreshing with chips on a late summer afternoon in North Carolina. I am really looking forward to this card party to celebrate the last weekend of the summer. I will be sure to make note of what was on the menu and share with you, dear readers (wherever you are.) For now, here are our favorite family salsa recipes.

Jaymi’s Spicy Fruit Salsa:

  • 5 kiwis, peeled and diced
  • 1 pint of blackberries, coarsely chopped
  • 4 medium tart apples, diced finely
  • 2 tablespoons of strawberry jam
  • 1/2 cup of brown sugar
  • 2 diced Jalapeño peppers
  • 1 tablespoon of hot sauce (not Tabasco!)
  • 7 oz. can of green salsa
  • 1/3 cup lime juice

Mix all ingredients together and serve with fresh tortilla chips or with ham, pork or chicken. You can refrigerate this salsa for up to a week. The next day, the salsa will be much spicier!

Lynn’s Christmas Cranberry Salsa:

  • 2 8 oz. bags of fresh cranberries, chopped in the food processor
  • 1 Navel orange chopped in the food processor, peel and all
  • 1 small red onion
  • 3 or 4 fresh Jalapeño peppers (use fewer if you like your salsa milder), chopped in the food processor
  • 1 cup white sugar

Mix ingredients together and serve with fresh tortilla chips, or as a side dish with ham or poultry. This salsa can be frozen. The longer it sits, however, the hotter it gets. I like to use it the second day.

Family Tangy Mango Salsa:

  • 1 ripe mango, peeled, pitted, and diced (about 1 1/2 cup)
  • 1 small red onion, finely chopped
  • 1 or 2 Jalapeño peppers, finely chopped
  • 1 small cucumber, peeled and diced (we remove the seeds, because Mom is allergic to them)
  • 1 diced red bell pepper
  • 3 tablespoons fresh cilantro leaves, chopped
  • 3 tablespoons lime juice
  • 1/2 cup sugar

Mix all ingredients together and serve with fresh tortilla chips, or as a side dish for fish or poultry. Remember, the longer it sits, the hotter it gets.

This is the one I am making for this afternoon’s card party.

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One Comment

  1. Celynoir says:

    So I tweaked the Mango Salsa recipe a bit, since I didn’t have any red bell peppers. I only used one fresh Jalapeño pepper, and two mangoes. It was still entirely too hot! I tried it with a lime-flavored tortilla chip…delicious but still too hot for general consumption. So what could I do? I looked in the refrigerator and found two granny smith apples…i chopped them up and tossed them in. My delicious mango salsa was now just right! Still spicy and flavorful, and still crunchy fresh, and totally divine with those lime tortilla chips! I noticed several people eating the salsa alongside their chicken, as a side dish. Lesson Learned: apples will help tone down your salsa, but they won’t interfere with your original flavors.

    By the way, I was going to share what was on Saturday’s menu at the cookout, wasn’t I? There was too much to remember, but I remember nice thick hamburgers, fried chicken, grilled steaks that people were able to cut with a plastic knife, two kinds of deviled eggs, potato salad, a lovely squash-based cole slaw, a big chocolate cake, pecan pie, pumpkin pie, tossed salad, various pasta salads with various kinds of meat, poultry and seafood, and more things I can’t recall. We ate steadily for five hours. Honestly.

    Lynn

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